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OFFICE OF STRATEGIC SERVICES 
Research and Analysis Branch 


DECLASSIFIED 
SEE EXCHANGE & GIFT DIV, 
DECLASSIFICATION FILE NO.... JLi/ 7 


• 0«|^-Ca ^33jJ r i^v\x^ Ql^..oJuC$\ 


R & A No. 2359 


THE PROJECTED POPULATION OF GERMANY, 

1945 TO 1975 


Description 


The estimated future population of 
Germany, by sex and single year of age, *. 
1945 to 1975, after allowance for 
military deaths. 


This document contains information 
affecting the national defense of the 
United States within the meaning of 
the Espionage Act, 50 U. S. C. 31 and 
32, as amended. Its transmission or 
the revelation of its contents in any 
manner to an unauthorized person is pro¬ 
hibited by law. 


Washington 


20 March 1945 


Copy No. 
CONFIDENTIAL 














O'"-, 


SUMMARY 


CONFIDENTIAL 







I# This study examines the effect of an estimated 

r- , ^ 

4,221,000 military deaths in•the present war on the size and * 
composition of the. German population (defined to include the 
population of Austria and Sudetenland), German military 
deaths in this war to 1 January 1945 are almost twice those 
suffered in the last war by Germany and that part of the 
Austro-Hungarian.Empire which was part of Germany in May 1939. 


2. The following assumptions were used in the projec¬ 


tion: (a) the population alive on 1 January 1945 was simply 
treated actuarily on the basis of the 1932 to 1934 mortality 
rates for Altreich Germany, except that the infant mortality 
rate was slightly reduced; (b) annual births were estimated on 
the assumption that -the fertility rates for married women 
realized in Altreich Germany in 1935 prevailed throughout the 

period, with illegitimate births a constant proportion of total 

. • • 

births; (c) the number of married Women at each age was. assumed 
to be equal to the number of-married men who were two years 
older, and (d) the proportion of'men who were married was , 

assumed equal to that which prevailed in Altreich Germany in 
1925, the first post-war census year. 

3. The net reproduction rate in Altreich Germany was; 
0.880 in 1935* If the other assumptions adopted in estimating 
births for the present■projection had prevailed in 1935, the 
net reproduction rate would have been 0*902. Actually, the 
estimated number of females 15 through 44 declined from 
18,693,000 on 1 January 1945 to 15,153,000 on 1 January 1975, 
so that the estimated -number of females in this age group at 
the beginning of 1975 was 81 percent of the number in this 
age group at the beginning of 1945. Thus the effect of mili¬ 
tary losses was to telescope two generations of decline in 
population into one* 

4* The total population of Greater Germany, which was 


ii 


CONFIDENTIAL 



/ 


£35 <f 





CONFIDENTIAL 


79,202,000 at the beginning of 1939, is estimated to have 
declined to 77,782,000 by 1945. The population is expected 
to reach a low point of 76,815,000 in 1963 and then to increase 
moderately to 77,369,000 hy 1975. 

5. The birth rate, which had been 20.4 per thousand 
population in 1939, is expected to decline to 13.67 in 1945, 
reach a low of 12.24 in 1952, advance to 17.49 in 1969, and 

then decline again to the end of the period. 

• «• . . • / 

6. As a result of the gradual aging of the population, 

the death rate per 1000 population increases from 12.63 in 1946 
to 16.89 in 1974. ‘ 

7. The male age group 15 through 34, which is the com- 

\ ' ' * * ' ‘ A • * • ’ 

bat-manpower group, is estimated to have declined from 12,931,000 
in 1939 to 8,641,000 by the beginning of 1945. The size of this 
group increases to a maximum of 12,016,000, 7 percent below 
the 1939 level, at the beginning of 1960, and declines from 
here to 9,970,000 at the beginning of 1975. 

7. The present study refers to the population of Germany 
as it was in May 1939' at which time the German state incorpo¬ 
rated practically the entire Germanic population of Europe-. It 
is recognized that post-war Germany will have lost control over 

part of these populations, notably that of Austria. But it * 

\ : 

should also be remembered that 1937 Germany did not have control 
of the Germanic populations of Austria or Czechoslovakia. 
Nevertheless during the present war Germany has succeeded in 
making full use of the Austrian and Sudeten Germans. • 


iii 


CONFIDENTIAL 




CONFIDENTIAL 


THE PROJECTED POPULATION OF GERMANY, 1945 TO 1975 • 

1 . INTRODUCTION 

This reaper socks to examine the effects only of Germany’s 
wartime manpower losses on the development of the size and 
composition of the future German population of Europe, It is 

9 

well recognized that the influences of other elements (such as 
a continuation of the downward trend in fertility and mortality 
or a repetition of the conspicuous success in the 1930’s of 
the Nazi pro-natalist policy, or post-war political and economic 

events such as enforced labor for largo masses of German males 

* * < ] • * . 

in foreign lands or the de-industrialization of Germany) either 
singly or in.combination, will undoubtedly have greater long- 
run significance in this connection. For instance, the size, 
and composition of the German population in 1939 was more, 
seriously affected by the extremely small number of births 
during the last war and the general downward trend of fertility 
in the 1920’s and early 1930'is than by all deaths'due to mili¬ 
tary action during the last war. Nonetheless, the effect of . 

Germany’s war losses on her population development is of con- 

•" . . * .* ■. r 

siderable interest, and the existence of reliable estimates of 
the magnitude and age distribution of these losses makes possible 
a study of this question, 

; • , . , ~ . * * * 

II. METHOD 

For the purpose of this study Germany is defined to in¬ 
clude all territories within the boundaries of the Reich on 
17 May 1939, While it is recognized that in the post-war 
settlement Germany will certainly be deprived of the Austrian 
and Czech territories and perhaps of all the territory east of 
the Oder and part of the Rhineland, for some purposes, and 
especially for an estimate of Germany’s future military manpower 

potential, the more inclusive area is relevant. 

It is estimated that by 1 January 1945 the German Armed 

♦ * 

Forces had suffered some 4,221,000 deaths from battle causes 
plus the excess of non-battle deaths above what would have 


-1 


CONFIDENTIAL 









-2- 


CONPIDENTIAL 


been normally expected in civilian life from men of comparable 
age and physical condition,^ In the last war Germany lost 
2,037,000^ men in the armed forces, and that' part of the former 
Austro-Hungarian Empire which is now incorporated in Germany, 
as defined above, lost an estimated 215,000 men in the armed 
forces. Thus the direct military losses of Germany to tho 
beginning of 1945 were almost twice as large as those suffered 
in the last war. 

Given the impossibility of predicting the further dura¬ 
tion and intensity of the war in Europe, an attempt to esti¬ 
mate the magnitude of additional losses to the end of the war 
would be extremely hazardous, and, therefore, no allowance for 
such casualties has been introduced into the present projection. 
Neither has any allowance been made for civilian deaths due to 
bombing (a category omitted from the German vital statistics 
since March 1943 and at present of the order of 150,000) or for 

civilian deaths in the present invasion of Germany from east and 

* . . * > 

west. While, as indicated, there is available an estimate of 
the number of deaths due to bombing,' in view of the relative 
insignificance of this category and the absence of any informa¬ 
tion on the breakdown of these deaths by age and sex, it was : 
decided to refrain from introducing this consideration into 
the projection. 

In Table 1 on the following page there are presented: 

(1) the normally expected male population of Germany aged 16 to 

47 by single year of age projected from the census of May 1939 

on the basis of the 1932 to 1934 mortality experience; {2) an 

estimate of the distribution of military deaths by age on 

1 January 1945; (3) the normally expected male population after 

allowance for military deaths; (4) the normally expected female 

population; and (5) the estimated excess of females over males. 

17 For an explanation of tho method used in deriving this 
estimate see R & A Report No. 1088.5, Losses in the Gorman 
Armed Forces . 

2. Sanitaetsbericht liber das Deutsche Heer im Weltkriege, 
1914-1918, Vol. IlTT p. 12. 


CONFIDENTIAL 

















-3- 


CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 1. GERMAN POPULATION AND MILITARY DEATHS, 
AGE 16 TO 47, 1 JANUARY 1945 


(In thousands of persons) 



•• (i) 

(2) 

(3) 

Male Popula- 

(4) 

Normal 

(8) 

Excess of 

Age 

Normal Male 

Military 

tion after 

Female 

Population 

Females 

Population 

Deaths 

Mil. Deaths 

Over Males 

16 

610.0 


610.0 

594.0 

16.0 

17 

598.0 

1.9 

596.1 

581.0 

15.1 

18 

624.0 

71.9 

552.1 

606.0 

53.9 

19 

654-.0 

163.3 

490.7 

638.0 

147.3 

20 

646.0 

273.3 

372.7 

629.0 

256.3 

21 

-649.0 

285.5 

363.5 

632.0 

268.5 

22 

679.0 

294.5 

384.5 

662.0 

277.5 

23 

724.0 

324.1 

399.9 

701.0 

301.1 

24 

736*0 

341.8 

394.2 

711.0 

316.8 

25 

561.0 

215.5 

345.5 

535.0 

189.5 

26 

369.0 

135.3 

233.7 

356.0 

122.3 

27 

357.0- 

132.7 

•224.3 

342.0 

• 117.7 

28 

394.0 

151.5 

242.5 

381.0 

138.5 

29 

525.0 

189.7 

335.3 

511.0 

• 175.7 

30 

670.0 

216.8 

453.2 

664.0 

210.8 

31 

689.0 

207.5' ••• 

481.5 • 

681.0 

'199.5 

32 

712.0 

198.3 

513.7 

700.0 

186.3 

33 

681.0 

188.5 

492.5 

669.0 

• 176.5 

34 

711.0 

174.1 

536.9 

702.0 

165.1 

35 

724.0 

•162.2 

: 561.8 ; 

7-16.0 

154.2 

36 

724.0 

135.3 

588.7 

716.0 

127.3 

37 

711.0' 

94.8 

• 616.2 

703.0 

86.8 v. 

38 

707.0 

73.9 

633.1 

703.0 

69.9 

39 

- Y 677.0- . 

- - 38.3 : 

' 638.7 

674*0 

• 35.3 ' 

40 

681.0 

31.6 

649.4 

680.0 

30.6 

41 

■- 660.0' 

31.1 

•• • 628.9 

661.0' 

• 32.1- 

42 

676.0 

27.7 

648.3 

676.0 

27.7 

43 

• 658.0 

• 25.8 ’**' 

• 632.4 

' 658.0 L- ; 

25.6 

44 

628.0 

13.9 

614.1 

637.0 

22.9 

45 

• ‘ ‘584.0 

8.8 - 

575.2 

: 629.0 

53.8 

46 

545.0 

7.2 

537.8 

621.0 

83.2 

47 

509,0-' 

' 4.8 - 

'504.2 

: 603.0 - 

• h. 98.8 


20,073*0 

4,221.4- 

18,001.6 

19,972.0 

4,120.4 


CONFIDENTIAL 






















-4- 


CONFIDENTIAL 


'The estimated age-distribution of military deaths to 1 June 
1944 is based on an analysis of obituaries for members of the 
German Armed Forces appearing in the German daily press,^ and 
the distribution from 1 Juno to 31 December 1944 is based on 
an analysis of the age-distribution of prisoners of war cap¬ 
tured by the US Army in Frahqc.2 

, An examination of .Table 1 reveals a significantly larger 

* » « 

number of females than males in the Reproductive ages, wl th 

• • > « 

females aged 16 to 47 on 1 January 1945 numbering 19,972,000 

• • 

and males 15,852,000, In the total % age group, males are only 

* w V ‘ 

79 percent as numerous as females, and in the age group 17 

• • * .. 

through 36, in which the .heaviest military losses are concen- 

• ■ # * • 

trated, males are only 68 percent as numerous as females* 

* * 4 * 

, It is from this disproportionaltiy in the relationship 

• * 

between males and females in the reproductive ages that the 
• *• 

population projection presented herein stems. Those persons 

• 4 * 4 4 

alive on 1 January 1945 were simply treated actyarily on tho 
* \ . 4 
basis of the .1932-34 German mortality experiencq, with minor 

' * 4 •« t 

downward revisions of the infant mortality rate to account for 
* ’ ' - 

realized reductions in this rate by 1939,3 This use of 1932-34 

* 4 . . , 

mortality experience will probably result in an underestima- 

* 4 # '. » • 

tion of this.portion of the projected population, at least after 

» , 

4 * 

the distress of the immediate post-hostilities perioc£‘since 

* . * • - 

mortality rates will probably fall. However, in view of the 
very low level to which mortality rates had fallen by the 
base period, with a death rate of 11 per 1000 population, ,tho 
underestimation will probably be very small. In estimating the 
number of births for each year from 1945 through 1974 the 
following procedure was used: (1) from the number of men at each 
age 18 to 46 inclusive there was estimated, on assumptions given 


1. See R & A Report No. 1087,5, Age - Distribution of Dead in 
the German Ground Forces . 

2. See R & A Reports Nos. 2581.1 and 2581,2, Nationality and 
Age of German Armed Forces Prisoners Captured in Northern 
Franco . 

3. The infant mortality rate was 7.7 per 100 live births, or 
8.53 per 100 male births and 6.84 per 100 female births in the 
period 1932 to 1934 and 6.2 per 100 births, or 6.86 per 100 
male births and 5.50 per 100 female births in 1939. 


CONFIDENTIAL 






















CONFIDENTIAL , 


-5- 

below, the number of married men; (2) the number of married 
women must be -equal to the number of married men and the 
number of married women in each age group was assumed to be 
equal to the number of married men two years older so < that 
the comparable female age group is 16 *to 44; (3) by applying 

t * 

* 

• • 

age-srecific fertility rates discussed' below there was derived 

an estimate of the number of children born to married women; 

♦ 

and (4) an allowance was made for illegitimate births. It is 

assumed that there is no immigration or emigration. A discus- 

« 

sion of the reasons for the selection of the precise parameters 

used 1 3 given below.* 

♦ 

(1) • Assumptions with respect t*o the proportion of 
married males 18 to 46 and the age relationship of married 

r - , ■■■ — . . ’ 1 "■ ■■■- r- ■■—-> — ■■■ ■ ■ ■■ ■— 

women to married merr. An examination of the German census 
statistics for ,1910/ 1925, 1933, and 19j59 reveals that, the pro- 

a 

portion of males 18 to 46 who were married was highest, in 1925. 

As a result of losses in the last war and the consequent excess 

« 

m 

of males over females in the reproductive ages there wps an in- 

- • 

% 

crease in the proportion of married males. This .increase was 
not sufficient to offset the decline in the number of males, 
and thus the proportion of females who were married declined. 
From 1925 to 1933, with the general deterioration in economic 
and political conditions and the trend towards equalization in 
the number of males and females in the reproductive ages, there 
v/as a decline in the percentage of males who were married. The 
improved economic conditions from 1933 to 1939 and the strong 
pro-natalist policies of the Nazis produced an increase in the 
number of males who were married, but a comparison of 1939 with 
1925 (presented in Table 2 on the following page) reveals that 
■the level in 1939 was lower than that in 19<o5. 

For the purpose of the present projection it is assumed 
that the proportion of males who were married at each age is 
equal to the rate which prevailed in 1925. In view of the 
magnitude of German military losses, these rates are regarded 


CONFIDENTIAL 








-6- 


CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 2. PROPORTION OF THE GERMAN MALE POPULATION 16 TO 46 
MARRIED, BY SINGLE YEAR OF AGE, 1925 AND 1939 



a) 

(2) 

Age 

1925 a 

1939 


(3) 

Excess of 1925 
Proportion over 
1939 

TT^2 • 


18 


. .09 

.09 


19 


.26 

.57 

-.31 

20 


.90 

1.27 

-•.37 

21 


‘3.-50 

• ' 3.12 

.38 

22 


8*31 

6.59 

1.72 

23 


15.87 

11.59 

4.28 

24 


25.73 

20,69 

5.04 

25 


37.38 

. ’ 35.22 

2.16 

26 


47.44 

44.47 

2.97 

27 


56.65 

53.06 

3.59 

28 


63.74 

60.36 

.3,38 

29 


69.25 

66.16 

3.09 

30 


73.52 

'•70.56 . 

2..96 

31 


• -77.59. 

,74.05 

3.54 

32 


80.31 

76,89 

3.42 

33 


82.53 

79*20 

3.33- 

34 

, r 

84.33 

81.09 

3.24 

35 


85.47 

82.55 

2.92 

36 

* 

87.03 

84.02 

3.01 

37 


87.85 

■ 85.21 

2.64 

38 


88.64 

86.35 

2.29 ■ 

39 


89.14 

87.63 

1.51 

40 

* , 

89.35 

88.30 

1.05 

41 


89.95 

88.95 

1.00 

42 

f • 

90*19 

89,38 

.81 

43 


90.47 

; 89.68 

.79 

44 

9 

90.46 

89.89 

• 57 

45 


90.28 

90.12 . 

.16 

46 

• 

90.38 

90.19 

.19 

a. 

Al'treich 

Germany 

only. 


b. 

Germany 

including 

Austria and Sudetenland. 





CONFIDENTIAL 











I 


-7- 


CONFIDENTIAL 


as reasonable as an average over the whole period. With 

% 

tolerably favorable political and ecdnomic conditions .in 

■ ... , fi* 

■ * ' : , J * 

Germany in the immediate post-war period the proportion of 

r ••« j- • 

married men will', probably be higher than assumed here,* with 

• . • * 
a gradual decline as the number of males and females in'.the 

• t .. 

reproductive ages becomes more nearly equal, 

^ . • ' 

In relating the number of married men to the number of 

married women, it is assumed that the number of married women 
at each age is equal to the number of married men who- are two 
years older, for instance the number of married women age 20 
is equal to the number of married men age 22, This assumption 
was established on the basis of an analysis of the age relation¬ 
ship of the number of married people in ..each of the census years 
1925, 1933, and 1939, This assumption is introduced in order 
to reflect the- effect of military losses among males on the 
proportion of women who will be married, 

(2) . Assumed fertility rates for married women ;' From 

. •" * i 

the turn of the century to 1933 the ^German birth rate under- 

i 

went a precipitate f if somewhat irregular, decline. Data for 

4 

1901 through 1914 are presented in Table 3 on the following 

« 

page. From 1850 t»o the end of the century the German, birth 

i 

rate had remained* at a level of roughly 35 births per] 1000 

population. By 1913 the birth rate, had declined to'£7,5 per 

' > » 

1000 population, *and during the las*t .war, in 1917, the, birth 

i * ' * ' 

rate declined tq*the extremely low*rate of 13,9 per .1000 popu- 

f i z 

lation, so that-at this point the birth rate was only one-half 
of the 1913 rate and 40 percent of the birth rate -in '1901, 

* t* • 

In 1920, with the realization of births deferred during the 

’’ ■ i » 

war and the return to more or les-s normal conditions, the birth 

» * - . > . - 

rate roso to 25,9 per 1000 population. From 1920 ^through 1929 

r 

9 

tho birth rate'continued the decline begun in the.pre-war years, 

> . , '■ r 

reaching 18 per 1000 population ‘•in- the latter year. From 1930 

* • » 

to 1933, ys ars of severe economic depression and ‘extreme polit- 

* '• ♦ 1 ' »• 

. ’ *' 

ical instability, the birth rat® declined from 17,6 por thousand 


•CONFIDENTIA] 





-8 


CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 3, VITAL RATES IN GERMANY, 1901-1944 



Births per 1000 

Deaths per 1000 

Natural Increas 


Population 
(Including 

Population 
stillbirths ) 

per 100(3 

Population 

1901 

35.7 

20.7 

15*1 

02 

35.1 

19.4 

15*6 

03 

33.8 

20.0 

13*9 

04 

34.1 

19.6 

14*5 

05 

32 * 9 

19,8 

13*2 

06 

33a 

18*2 

14*9 

07 

32.3 

18.0 

14.2 . 

08 

32a 

18.1 

14.0 

09 

31.0 

17*2 

13*9 

10 

29 *.8 

16*2 

13*6 

11 

28,6 

17*3 

11*3 

12 . 

28*3 

15*6 

12*7 

13 

27*5 

15*0 

12*4 

14 

26*8 

19»0a 

7*8 

15 

20*4 

21.4a 

-1;0 

16 

15*2 

19*2a 

—4*0 

17 f 

13 *9 

20 * 6 a 

-6,6 

18 f 

14*3 • 

24,8 a 

-10.5 

19S 

20,0 

15.6 

4.5 

20 h 

25.9 

15 a 

10.8 

21 

25,3 

13,9 

11.4 

22 

23.0 

14,4 

8.6 

23 

21,2 

13,9 

7,3 

24 

20,6 

12,2 

sa 

25 

20.8 

11,9 

8,8 

26 

19.6..-' 

11.7 

7.9 

27 

•. : .18.4 ■ 

12.0 

6.5 

28 

18.6 

11.6 

7.0 

29 

18.0 

12,6 

5.4 

. 30 

17.6 

11.0 

6.5 

31 

16,0 

11.2 

4,8 

32 

15,1 

10.8 

4.3 

33 

14.7 

11.2 

3.5 

34 

18.0 

10,9. 

7.1 

35 

18.9 

11.8 

7.0 

36 

19.0 

11.8 

7.2 

37^ 

18.8 

11.7 

7.1 

38 1 

19.0 

12.0 

7*0 

39 

H 20.4 

12.6 b 

7.8 

40 

20.4 

13.0 • .' • 

7.4 

41 

18.8 

12.3 

5.5 

42 

15.5 

12.1 

•' 5.4 

43 

3.6.2. 

12.3° 

3.9 

44 

17 a d 

•... e 

e 


a7 Includes deaths in the armed forces* 

b* 'Excludes all deaths in the armed forces since September 1939. 
Since members of. the armed forces are included in the'popula¬ 
tion base, the result is an understatement of the death rate 
for all causes excluding enemy action. 

c. Excludes all civilian deaths due to enemy action since 
March 1943* 

d. Provisional, 
e* Not available. 

f. Without Alsace-Lorraine. 

g. Excluding Alsace-Lorraine and territory ceded to Poland, 
h 0 From 1920 through 1937 Altreich plus Saarland. 

i. From 1938, Germany exclusive of the boundaries of 1939. 


CONFIDENTIAL 














CONFIDENTIAL 


— 9** 


population to a now peacetime low -of 11.7 per 1000 population. 
The success of the Nazi pro-natalist policy is strik- 
i n Cly illustrated by the rise in the birth rate from the 
depths to which it had fallen in the depression to 20,1 per 

thousand population by 1939, and the maintenance of the birth 

. ♦ 

rate at relatively high levels in view of the net mobilization 

- « 

of approximately 55 percent of all males 18 to 15 years of age, 

• % 

The increase in the birth rate is due not only to the better¬ 
ment of economic conditions in the middle and late thirties, 

which alone would have produced a realization of births deferred 

•• , * 

■ i 

during the depression years, but also to a fundamental revision 

in parental opinion as to optimum family size. Wore the rise 

in the birth rate due solely to a cyclical improvement in gco- 

■ v * 

nomic conditions, an increase would have been expected in only 

* 

first and second births per family. Actually there was a signi¬ 
ficant increase in third and higher-order births,! again indi¬ 
cating a fundamental revision of parental opinion as to optimum 
family size. 

Analysis of the trend of net reproduction rates in 

Germany for the period 1901-1910 and for selected years from 

1926 through 1940 reveals a somewhat similar picture The 

data are presented in Table 4 on the following page. In the 

period 1901 to 1910 the net reproduction rate in Germany was 

1,5 and by 1926 it had fallen to 0.980. An indication of the 

success of the Nazi pro-natalist policy is reflected in the 

rise of the net reproduction rate from the depression level of 

BurgdBrfer, Friedrich, VBiker am Abgrund , Munich/Berlin, 
1937, pp. 40-45; Wirtschaft und Statisbik , February 1942, Dio 
Zunahme der Geburten von 1933 bis 1939 , pp, 29-35, 

2, The net reproduction rate, is a measure of the extent to 
which the current female population in the reproductive ages 
is replacing itself, on the assumption of current fertility 
and mortality. Thus, if the net reproduction rate is 1.000, 
the number of women 16 to 41 in the next generation (28 to 
30 years hence) will be exactly equal to the number of .females 
in’this group in the current period. If the not reproduction 
rate is 1.500, the number of females in this group in the next 
generation will be 50 percent greater than the number in the 
current period. If the not reproduction rate is 0,500, the 
number of females in the reproductive age group in the next 
generation will be one-half the number in the* cu-rrent period, • ( 


CONFIDENTIAL 


















-10- 


CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 4. NET REPRODUCTION RATES IN GERMANY, a 
1901 to 1910 and 1926-1940 


Year Rato 

1901-1910 ' 1.500 b 

1926 .980 

1931 .750 

1933 - .700 

1934 * .820 

1935 .880 

' 1936* .904 

1937 ; .904 

1938 • .945 

1939 .988 

1940 .996 


a. *From 1926 through 1938 the data arc for Germany, including 
the Saarland. For 1939 and 19.40 tho data are for Germany as 
of the' boundaries of May 1939 0 

b. Rounded to the first decimal place. 

Source: Statistical Yearbook of the - League of Nations , Geneva, 

1943, pp.~^>0-51, except figure for 1901-3 910 which is from. 
Kuczynski, R, R., Living Space and Population Problems, Oxford, 
1939, p. 16. * 


0.700 to slightly less.than unity in 1940. Kuczynski, in 
commenting on ’’the genuine rise in fertility’-’ and the develop¬ 
ment of the net reproduction rate in Germany from 1934 through 
1938, says: ’’Thus the German * Government has been successful in 
an attempt which so far; has failed whenever and wherever other 
governments tried to reach the same goal.”l v 

As indicated earlier, the birth deficit in Germany 
during the last war was a more.important contributor to total ' 
population ’’losses” , than were military deaths. A comparison of 

A » 

the birth deficit in the last war with the deficit to 1 January 
1945 in the present war reveals the-extent of the Nazi success 
in preventing the. recurrence of the dreaded hollow birth classes 
If the average of birth rates in the period 1910- to 1914'and 
1920 to 1924 be accepted.as the norm which would have pre¬ 
vailed in Germany if not for the war, then the birth deficit 
• •* # 

for Germany (1914 area) in the period 1915 through 1919 was 

some 3,030,000 and. for that portion of the Austro-Hungarian 

Empire which has since been incorporated into Germany the birth 

deficit was some 700,000, giving a total of 3,730,000. On the 

1. Kuczynski, R. R,, Living Space and Population Problems , 
Oxford, 1939, p. 15. 


CONFIDENTIAL 






















- 11 - 


CONFIDENTIAL 


* 

other hand, if tho birth rate had remained at the 1939 level, 

there would have been approximately 1,135,000 more births 

than were actually realized in the period 1910 through 1944. 

Thus, on the ba.sis of this comparison, the birth deficit in 

Germany during the. last war was more than three times as 

* 

large as during this war to 1 January 1945* 

The Nazis have gone to great lengths to assure the main- 

* . < 

tcnance of the birth rate at a. tolerable level during the war. 

4 

Payments to dependents of servicemen have been extremely lib- 

% 

era.l* Special rations have been provided for pregnant women 

f 

9 ‘ 

and infants. Mothers with young children have been exempted 

i 

from registration for compulsory labor, Therever possible, 

* 

special consideration has been given to the granting of fur¬ 
loughs for married men in the armed forces, Nazi propaganda 

* ■ 

on the necessity of ^securing the future of the race” has been 
ceaseless. The presence of some 4,600,000 male foreign workers 
has undoubtedly been of some significance in this connection, 
despite Nazi prohibitions* 

In selecting a set of fertility rates for the present 
projection, an attempt has been made to effect a compromise 

j. » * - * 1 

between the two conflicting trends analyzed above. It is on 

- * * ' * 

this basis that the 1935 fertility rates for married women in 
Altreich Germany (presented in Table 5 on tho following page) 
have been selected for the present projection. It is assumed 
that illegitimate children will be the same proportion of 
legitimate children as in 1935, namely 8.52 percent. In 1935 
the not' reproduction rate was 0.880, about midway between the 
depression level and tho peak attained in 1940. If the assump¬ 
tion on the proportion of married males and their relationship 
to the number of married females introduced above (seo pp.5~7) 
is applied to the 1935 fertility rates for married women, the 
net reproduction rate is increased by 3.3 percent to 0*902. 

In Table 6 there is presented an illustration of the 
method employed in estimating annual births. The specific 


CONFIDENTIAL 




-12- 


CONFIDENTIAL 



Tabic 5i FERTILITY RATES FOR MARRIED WOMEN 
IN.ALTREICH GERMANY^ BY AGE, 1935 


Ago 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 ' 

37 ■ 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 • 

44 


Rate for 1000.Married 

Worsen 

340*52 

374*84 

378*03 

352.26 

334.25 

307,51 

.282.14 

263.33 

246.79 
231.20 

• 219.25 • 

205.17 

191.36' 

178.29 

166.53 

151.97 

134.79 

118.96 

105.96 ' 

93.79 
80.82 
70.97 
60.77 • 

51.80 
. r 

i 

29.50 

f 

♦ 

• *•# • 


16-19 

20-24 

25-29 

30-34 

35-39 

40-44 


361.41 

286.80 

205.05 

135.64 

73.63 

29.50 


CONFIDENTIAL 






-13- CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 6. WORKSHEET FOR THE ESTIMATION OF BIRTHS IN GERMANY, 

.... .... .... - • . -v 1.945- 


• • -V . 

.. - a) •.. 

. (2) - 

- •• (3) • 

(4) 

(5) 

Age 

Number of 

Percent of 

Number of 

Fertility 

Legitimate 


Males 

all Males 

P’eniales 

Rate for 

Births 

• 

* 

: Married 

Married ; 

Married * 


• 

(In thou- 

• 

(2 years 

Women 

(In thou- 

* • 

sands) 

* . 

V 

younger) 

(per I'OOO) 

sands) 

18-21• 

1779.0• 

‘ 1.2 

21*3* 

361.41 

7.7 

22-26* 

1757 *8 * -• 

26.9 

472.3*. 

286.80' 

135.6 

27-31 * 

1736.8* 

. 68.1 

1182.8' 

205.05‘ 

' 242.5 

32-36 - 

2693.6* • 

' : 83.9 

2259.9' 

135.64V- 

■' 306.5 

37-41 * 

3166.3 

. * ’ 88.9 

2814.8 ‘ 

73.63’ 

207.3 

42-46 - 

3007.8 * 

• . 90.4 

•2719.1 ' 

29.50' 

80.2 

Total> 

• 

14147.3* - 

• 4 ; • 

V 

9470.7 '' 

. . 

' 979.8 


979,.800 Total legitimate births 

• 1.0852 Multi'plyer to allow for illegitimate births 
1,QG3,-.300 Total’ births 


data are for 1945. •• In Column 1 there 'is presented an estimate 

' • - . ' . • • • ■ • V. • 

of the number of males age .18.to 46* *0n the assumption that 

• • * ‘ - * 

the number of mrarried female^ 16 to 44 is 'equal to the number 

t # • • ‘ % 

of married males 18 to 46, art estimate of the number "of married 
■ • ■ * • * 

females 16 to #4 isyderivea by applying the. percentage of all 

*« ; % ; ' v ! • * ♦ » t ; 

married males in .1-925 to all males 18"to .46,. The' estimate of 

v • * •. ’ * . * ■ ■ ’• - ; ! 

••• (. /*/.. *• ; , ^ 

legitimate births i-s derived 'by applying the fertility- rate's •- 
for married women in 1935 to the estimated number of-married ■ * 
women* The estimated number of legitimate births is increased 
by 8*52 percent to allow for illegitimate births based on the 
experience in Altreich Germany in 1935. 

III. RESULTS OF THE PROJECTION 
Detailed results of the projection are presented in 
Appendices A and B. In Appendix A there is presented the pro¬ 
jected population of Germany for each year from 1945 to 1975, 
by sex and single year of age. The same data are presented in 
Appendix B by five-year age-groups. 

The total population of Germany, which had been 79.2 
million on 1 January 1939, 1 is estimated to have declined to 
77.8 million 2 by 1 January 1945 (See Table 7 on the following 
page). From here the population increases slightly to 77.9 

T~. Projected back from the census of 17 May 1939. 

2. Estimated figures are expressed in the form ”111 million”, 
”111 thousand” (rather than ”111,000,000”, ”111,000”) in order 
to avoid any spurious impression of accuracy beyond the fourth 
place• 


CONFIDENTIAL 

































14 


CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 7. ESTIMATED POPULATION, BIRTHS, AND DEATHS 
IN GERMANY, 1939 AND 1945 TO 1975 



Total Popu- 

Births^ 

Birth Rate 

Deaths^ 

Death Rate 


lation& 

(In thou- 

(Per 1000 of 

(In thou- 

(Per 1000 of 


(In thou- 
sands) 

sands) 

Population) 

sands) 

Population^ 

1939 

79,201.9 

1,633.7 

20.40 

1,009.3 

12.60 

1945 

77,781.8 

1,063.3 

13.67 

987.5 

12.70 

1946 

77,857.6 

• 1,020-. 4 

13.11 

983.7 

12.63 

1947 

77,894.3 

986.4 

12.66 

995.5 

12.78 

1948 

77,885.2 

969.2 

12.44 

1*, 006.9 

' 12,93 

1949 

77,847.5 

962.0 

12.36 

1 ', 020,2 

13.11 

1950 

77,789.3 

956.8 

12.30 

1*, 033.9 

13.29 

1951 

77,712.2 

954.5 

12.28 

1-, 048.0 

13.49 

1952 

77,618.7 

950.3 

12.24 

Y,061.2 

13.67 

1953 

77,507.8 

'961.1 

12.40 

1’, 07 4.1 

13.86 

1954 

77,394.8 

978.5 

12.64 

1,088.2 

14.06 

1955 

77,285.1 

998.5 

12.92 

1 ,101.0 

•14.25 

1956 

77,182.6 

1,020.7. 

13.22 

1,114,8 

14.44 

1957 

77,088.5 

1,045.9 

- 13.57 

1,129.2 

14.65 

1958 

77,005.2 

1,073.8 

13.94 

1,143.3 

14.85 

1959 

76,935.7 

1,101.9 

14.32 

1,156.2 

. 15.03 

1960 

76,881.4 

1,128.0 

14.67 

1,169.3 

15.21 

1961 

76,840.1 

1,157.0 

15.06 

1,181.9 

15.38 

1962 

76,815.2 

1,194.7 

15.55 

1,194.9 

15.56 i ■ 

1963 

76,815 wO 

1,,230.0 

16.01 

1,206,2 

15.70 

1964 

76,838.8 

1,261.4 

‘16.42 

1,219.3 

15.87 

1965 

76,880.4 

1,281.9 

16.67 

1,231.3 

16,02 

1966 

76,931.0 

1,307.4 

16.99 

1,241*1 

16.13 

19S7 

76,997.3 

1,335.6 

17.35 

1,251.1 

16.25 

1968 

77,081.8 

1,345.1 

17.45 

1,263,5 

• • 16.39 

1969 

77,163.4 . 

1,349.8 

17.49 

1,272.3 

16.49 

1970 

77,240.9 

1,343.8 

17.40 

1)282,4 

16.60 

1971 

77,302.3 

1,339.0 

17.32 

1,289.2 

16.68 

1972 

77,352.1 

1,330.6 

17.20 

1,295.6 

- 16.75 ' 

1973 

77,387.1 • 

1,307.0 

16.89 

1,301.6 

16.82 

1974 

1975 

77,392.5 
77,.369.3 

1,283.9 

16.59 

1,307.1 

. 16.89 


a. ' As of 1 January, of given year« 

b. During given year. 



.CONFIDENTIAL 





















-15- 


CONFIDENTIAL 


million in 1947 and then declines steadily to 1963 to .a mini¬ 
mum foh the period of 76.8 million. The population increases 

from this point to 77.4 million on 1 January 1974., where, it' 

* . . . k , . • 

begins to decline again. Thus from 1945 to 1975 the^/popula¬ 
tion declines by some 400,000, relatively a very, minor decline. 
Births in Germany in 1939 aggregated 1,633.7 thousand. ’ 

i , . . . • 

• > 

On 1 the basis of the assumptions outlined.above the estimated 

, * • r ; * - ’ • . * 

births in 1945 decline to 1063.3 thousand, or .to 65 percent of 

• .' • * ■ ' • • 

the *1939 level. As the classes which suffered the heaviest 
military losses move into the significant reproductive ages 
and the marriage rate among females declines as a result of 

i 

•*...» 

. • * i 

• t % 

the smaller number of males, the number of births per annum * 

• .u • 

. ( * • • . . ’ ■ - * 

decline to a minimum of 950.3 thousand in 1952. By 195$ those 
male classes born since 1927, who suffered no,military losses, 

. • • t * . ’ i • 

have entered the reproductive ages-in sufficient numbers so 

that the proportion of unmarried women declines and the number 

. .. . \ ' . 

' * t .* . ■' * 

of birth begins to rise, reaching a peak of 1,349,8 thousand in- 

* * i • . 

1969.- This peak is below the level of 1939, since.as a result 
of the assumptions of the projection, even when the number of 
males and females in the reproductive ages is approximately 
equal, the net reproduction rate is approximately nine-tenths. 
Though by 1969 the problem of the inequality in the number of ■ 
females and males in the reproductive .ages is no longer of 
real significance, the heritage left by this situation at an 
earlier date comes to the fore in the form of the smaller 
classes born since 1944 now entering the reproductive ages. • 

•■k * '. • * 

The number of births declines to 1,283.9 thousand in 1974 and 

* • • > 

1,090 thousand in 1987 (Sec Chart I). . 

It will be remembered that the estimated number, of •; 

births presented in Table 7 is based on the assumption that 

there is no immigration or emigration. It appears likely at 

.... ’ , ‘ 

present, however, that the Allies .are going to use considerable 
numbers of Germans for the reconstruction of devastated areas. 
For the purpose of estimating the effect of this contingency on 

CONFIDENTIAL 





-16- 


CONFIDENT IAL 


the population development, it is assumed that some four 
million men in' the age group 18 to 46 inclusive are employed 
at forced labor for a period of five years from 1945 through 
1949 in some area outside of Germany. I*t is further assumed 
that the number of men employed at forced labor in each age 
group is proportional to'the total number in this group. On 
the basis of those modifications of the■original assumptions, 
it is estimated,that births in the five-year period would 
amount to some 3,580 thousand. This estimate is 1,420 thou¬ 
sand, or 28 percent, less than- the ^estimate based on the assump 
tion that there is no forced labor. 

The ageing of the German population, i.e., the increase 
in the proportion of the total population in the older age- 
brackets, is clearly reflected in the increase in the number 
of deaths per annum from 983.7 thousand in 1946 to 1,307.1 
thousand in 1974 (33 percent), though, as it will be remembered 
by the assumptions of the projection the age specific mortality 
rates, remain constant over the whole period (See Chart I). 

While., as. has been shown above, this projection fore¬ 
casts a very minor decline in the over-all size of the German’ 
populate on.from 1945 to 1975, analysis- of the variation in the 
birth rate and the increase in the death rate points to signif¬ 
icant changes in the composition of this population. Table 8 
on the following page contains a summary of the data in 
Appendix A. ' 

First, the combat-manpower pool age 15 to 34^- declined 

from 12,931.5 thousand in 1939 to 8,614.8 thousand in 1945.2 

The number of men in this group increases steadily as the war- 

T7 The comb at-manpower pool is herein defined to include males 
15 to 34, despite the fact that only those males 18 to 34 are 
actually usable at the outbreak of a war, since in a war of any 
significant duration males 15 to 17 at the outbreak would 
gradually enter the combat age group properly speaking. 

2.. This does not mean that as of 1 January 1945 Germany had 
8,614.8 thousand men fit for combat duty. Actually some 1,685 
thousand men in this group had been discharged from the armed 
forces as unfit for further service, some 1,210 thousand were 
in Allied hands as prisoners of war, an estimated 1,865 thou¬ 
sand were originally declared unfit for combat service by the 
Germans, and 1,202 thousand were too young for immediate com¬ 
bat. service. 


CONFIDENTIAL 






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-17 


CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 8. THE PROJECTED POPULATION OP GERMANY, BY SEX 
.— AND AGE GROUP, 1939 AND 1945 TO 1975 a 

M ALES 


(in thousands) 



Age 

Age 

Age 

Age 



0-14 

15-34 

3^64 

6*3^99 

Total 

1939 

9352.8 

12931.5 

13550.4 

2838.9 

38673.6 

1945 

9641.7 

8614.8 

14397.8 

3334.0 

35988,3 

1946 

9523.1 

8649.3 

14483.91 

3394.1 

36050.4 

1947 

9444.2 

8679.5 

14522.6* 

3447.7 

36094.0 

1948 

'9372.3 

8668.7 

14575.3 

3499.3 

36115.6 

1949 

9304.2 

8681.1 

14596.7 

3541.5 

36123.5 

1950 

9130.8 

8825.7 

14580.0 

3585.4 

36121.9 

1951 

8925.9 

9116.5 

14440*8 

3628.3 

36111.5 

1952 

8716.7 

9502.2 

14210*5 

3665,1‘ 

36094.5 

1953 

8505.2 

9905.8 

13952*2 

3706.4 

36069.6 

1954 

78263.6 

10336.0 

13703* 8 

3740.8 , 

36044.2 

1955 

■7959.2 

107-29.0 

13564.2. 

3769.8 

36022.2 

1956 

7662.5 

11077.5 

13474.7 

3790.5 ' 

36005.2 

1957 

7429.8 

11367.9 

13378.1 

3813.1 

35993.9 

1958 

7346.0 

11536.6 

13271.2 

3835.7 

35989.5 

1959 

7242.0 

11759.4 

13131.7 

3860,1 

35993.2 

1960 

*7108.7 

12016.5 

12997,3 

3883.5 , 

.36006.0 

1961 

7141.4 

12007.5 

12961.3 

3917.0 

36027.2 

1962 

7207.8 

11921.4 ' 

12958.4 

3970.4 

36058.0 

1963 

7308.1 

11779,1 

12983.7 

4032.3 

36103.2 

1964 

7433.2 

11616.9 

12998.9 

4112.9 

36161.9 

1965 

*7576.1 

11469.5 

12971.3 

4213.9 

36230.8 

1966 

'7730.1 

11313.3 

12921.4 

4336.2 

36306.0 

1967 

'7897.3 

11214.2 

12815.7 

4463.6 

36390.8 

1968 

* 8079.5 

11128.8 

12683,6- 

4593.7 

36485.6 

1969 

* 8260.3 

11058.2 

12561.6 

4700.0 

36580.1 

1970 

* 8434.5 

10698.9 

12527.2 

4812.8 

36675.4.. 

1971 

* 8595.6 

10721.5 

12534.1 

4908.6* 

36759.8. 

1972 

< 8744.0 

10551.2 

12554.0 

4991.6 

36840.8' 

1973 

* 8876.4 

10392.8 

12592.0 

5054.4 

36915.6 

1974 

*■ 8984.0 

10213.0 

12688.5 

5089.6 

36975.1 

1975 

" 9067.3 

9 

9979.0 

12878.1 

5099.1 

9 

37021.5.. 

a. Number alive 

as of 1 January .of each year.^ 



CONFIDENTIAL 












■ -18- 


CONFIDENTIAL 


Table 8. THE PROJECTED POPULATION OF GERMANY, BY SEX 
AND AGE GROUP, 1939 AND 1945 TO 1975 (Cont»d) 

FEMALES 


(In thousands) 



Age 

Age 

Age 



o 

i 

f—• 

15-44 

45-99 

Total 

1939 

9016.5.-- 

19062.4 

12449.4 

40528.3 

1945 - 

9242.2. 

18693.0 

13858.3 

41793.5 

1946 - 

9124.5, 

18576.5 

14106.2 

41807.2 

1947 * 

9046.2. 

18391.6 

14362.5 

41800.3 

194 8 . 

8973.0 

18172.5 

14624.1 

41769.6 

1949 . 

8906.7. 

17958.0 

14859.3 

41724.0 

1950 . 

8737.8. 

17828.3 

15101.3 

61667.4 

1951 

8540.3* 

17734.9 

15325.5 

61600.7 

1952 . 

8336.1. 

17622.2 

15565.9 

.61524.2 

1953 . 

8131.3- 

17511.6 

15795.3 

41438.2 

1954 . 

7898.2 

17426.1 

16026.3 

41350.6 

1955 . 

7606.5. 

17410.2 

16246.2 

41262.9 

1956 . 

7321.8. 

17413.5 

16442.1 

41177.4 

1957 .. 

7098.7- 

17400.0 

16.595.9’ 

6-1094.6 

1958 . 

7017.3- 

17228.8 

16769.6 

.41015.7 

1959 . 

6920.3. 

17107.2 

16915.0 

.40942.5 

1960 - 

6792.2.. 

17043.3 

17034.9 

.40875.4 

1961 ... 

6823.4. 

16987.9 

17001.6' 

.40812.9 

1962 

6886.5, 

17032.1 

16838.6: 

,40757.2 

1963 . • 

6982.4. 

17097.1 

16632.3 

40711.8 

1964 • 

7101.5. 

17142.1 

16433.3. 

.40676.9 

1965 

7237.4- 

17017.6 

16394.6 

.40649.6 

1966 

7384.2- 

16728.7 

16512.1 

40625.0 

1967 

7543.3- 

16450.5 : 

16612,7 

.40506.5 

1968 

7717.4. 

16200.4 

16669.4 

..40596.2 

1969 

7890.0, 

16002.8 

16.690.5 

.40583.3 

1970 . 

8056.8 

1580.8.3 

16.702.4: 

,40567.5 

1971 

8211.3-. 

15615.9 

16.715.3 

,40542.5 

1972 

8353.3 

15465.1 

16692.9 

.40511.3 

1973 • 

8480.0- 

15349.1 

16842.4 

-40471.5 

1974 

8582.9. 

15235.6 

16598.9 

.40417.4 

1975 

8662.a 

15153.3 

16531 ,6 

,40347.8 


CONFIDENTIAL 











-19- 


CONFIDBNTIAL 


depleted classes move out and those unscathed by war enter, 

reaching a maximum in 1960, with' a "total of 12,016.5 thousand, 

only 916,000, or 7 percent, less than the 1939 total. As the 

effect of the post-1914 decline, of births sets in (after 1960), 

' * » • 

the number of males 15 to 34 inclusive declines to 9,979 thou- 

• "* 

sand, or 77 percent of the 1939 level. 

. * " * - • $ • ■ * « 

The change in the- number o-f -male- children. 0 to 14 was 

indicated in the analysis of the development of the birth r ate • 

What might be called the mature working population, age 

35 to 64, increased from 13,550.4 thousand 1 in 1939to 14,397.8 

thousand in 1945, despite the losses suffered by the classes at 

the lower end of this group. The size of this group continues 

to increase until it reaches 14,596.7 thousand in 1949, <and 

then declines to 12,997.3 thousand, or 96 perberrtW of the 1939 

level, in 1960, the year when the number of men in the combat 

■*•*..* V - . . ... 

age-groups is at a maximum. By 1975 the men in this group 
number 12,876.1 thousand, or 88 percent of the maximum reached 
in 1949. 

. • *. t . .. . . 

The number of men 65 and over increases throughout the 

* * r‘ . 

period, from 3,334 thousand in 1945 to 1 5099.1 thousand in 1975. 

The change in the number of female children : is, of 
course, parallel to the change in the number of male -children. 

The effect of the war on the development : of the size of 
the German population is’most clearly reflected in the change 
in the number of females 15 to 44 from'1945 to 1975.' The 
assumed fertility rates alone would have' produced ’a TO-per cent 

i 

decline in the size of this group in 6ne generation. Actually 
the size of this group declined frdm 18,693.0 thousand in 1945 
to 15,153.3 thousand in 1975, or by 19 percent'. Thus' the 

9 

effect of the war was* to telescope two generation T s losses-into 

one. In 1975 the number of females in the reproductive ages 

* «• 

will be the same as would have been present in 2005 in the 
absence of war and with the operation of the fertility and 
mortality rates assumed herein.* 


CONFIDENTIAL 




-20- ■_ 


CONFIDENTIAL 


The number of females 45 and over increases through¬ 
out the periQd from 13,858*5 thousand in 1945 to 16.,531.6 
thousand in 1975, or by 19 percent* 

IV. GRAPHIC COMPARISON OF GERMAN POPULATION 
PYRAMIDS, 1910, 1959, 1915 AND 1975. 

In Charts 2, 3, 4, and 5 there are presented in graphic 

* * i * 

form data on the age and sex structure of the German popula¬ 
tion in 1910, 1939, 1945, and 1975* A comparison'of the data 
for 1939 and 1945 with the data for 1910 clearly reveals what 

. . i 

two wars initiated by German nationalists, who were so con- 

» * • • * 

• * « , • • . • 

cerned with Germany’s demographic position, have done to the 
German population. 

The population pyramid for 1910 given in Chart 2 is 

« * 

characteristic of a country with an expanding population. The 
pyramid shows a smooth decline in numbers with increasing age- 
resulting from normal mortality. There is no serious dispro¬ 
portion in the number of males and females. Ore minor flaw in 

* • • * ' • , i • 

the pyramid, at age 39, reflects the decline in births' during 
the Franco-Prussian War. At the base of the pyramid, from 
age 0 to 5, one can see the beginning of the decline iri the 
absolute number of births, which was to be characteristic of 
German population development to 1933. 

A comparison of the number of females age 39 to SO in 
1939 with the number of males In the' same age group (See Chart 3) 

indicates the magnitude of direct military losses during the 

» * • 1 . 

last war. The large gap in the 1939 population pyramid at 

* # ' , 

ages 19 to 23 is a result of the birth famine during the last 
war. This same pyramid shows the results of the partial 
recovery in the number of births during 1920 and then the 

j , 

decline from 1921 through 1933. The success of the’Nazi pro- 
natalist policy is illustrated by the larger number of persons 
in the classes 0 to 4 in 1939. 

Estimated military deaths to 1 January 1945 are shown 
in the dotted area of Chart 3. The number of females in the 

i 

# 

age group 18 to 45 is significantly greater than the number 


CONFIDENTIAL 






-21- 


CONFIDENT IAL 


of males. The German success in maintaining births at a 
relatively high level in view of the extent of military mobi¬ 
lization becomes apparent from a comparison of the age classes 
0 to 3 on 1 January 1945 with the normal age classes age 25 to 
29 on the same date. 

The portion of Chart 5, (representing the projected popu¬ 
lation in 1975) above age 29 results from agoing the 1945 popu¬ 
lation; the portion under 30 is a result of the method of 
estimating births used in this paper# 


CONFIDENTIAL 



















. 


. . •• ■ 

\ 











< 

.. ■ ' ; r* v ; . • 

.. 


. 






chart 2 

THE POPULATION OF GERMANY, 1910, BY SINGLE YEARS 



l I I_I_1_I_1_I-_J I_1_1_1_1_lll> 

800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 

THOUSANDS OF PERSONS 












































































































































































































































































































































































. 

























. 



































CH ART 3 

THE POPULATION OF GREATER GERMANY, 1939, BY SINGLE YEARS 



800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 

THOUSANDS OF PERSONS 


































































































































































































































































































































































































































' 
























- 



















CHART 4 

THE ESTIMATED POPULATION OF GREATER GERMANY I JANUARY 
1945, AFTER MILITARY DEATHS* BY SINGLE YEARS 

* MILITARY DEATHS FROM I SEPT. 1939 
TO I JANUARY 1945 E23 

95 



THOUSANDS OF PERSONS 


























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































* tflAHd 

- , • * ^ r’ 

























































CHART 5 

THE PROJECTED POPULATION OF GREATER GERMANY, 1975 
BY SINGLE YEARS 



800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 

THOUSANDS OF PERSONS 





































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Age ,13.45 __ .1946 1947 1942 194 .9 


0 

1 

2 

l 


7 

g 

9 


676.1 
593-6 

559.5 

690.1 

739.8 

m-.i 

l|S:S 

623.0 



73s. 0 


628.9 

629.1 


494.5 

487.0 
6 




4 

as:! 
736.4 

Il|:6 

628.0 


478.0 

*+67.3 

483.0 

631.1 



735-0 



469.7 
^51.7 
^63.5 
431.1 

629.3 

583.3 

till 

733.7 

729.7 


10 595.0 

11 494.0 

12 507.O 

13 526.0 

14 577.0 

15 574.0 

16 594.0 

17 521.0 
IS 606.0 

19 63s.0 


622.2 

as 

506.5 

525.5 
576.3 


573.3 
593.1 
520.0 
604. g 


62g. 3 627.2 661. g 
621.5 627.6 626.5 
593.7 620.9 626,9 
493.° 593.1 620.3 
506.0 492.5 592.5 

524.9 505.4 491.9 
576.0 524.2 504.7 
572. 4 575.1 523.4 
592.1 571.4 574.1 

578.9 590.9 570.3 


20 

629.0 

636.6 

21 

632.0 

627.6 

22 

662.0 

630.5 

23 

701.0 

660.3 

24 

7H.0 

699.2 

26 

535.0 

356.0 

709.1 

533.6 

27 

342.0 

355.0 

22 

321.0 

341.0 

29 

5H.0 

379.9 


603.5 577.7 589.6 

635.2 602.1 576.4 

626.1 633.7 6OO.7 

628.9 624.5 632.1 

655.6 627.3 622.9 

697.4 656.9 625.7 

707.2 695.5 655.1 

532.1 705.2 693.6 

354.0 530.6 703.2 

340.0 353.0 529.1 


30 664.0 

31 681.0 

32 700.0 

33 669.0 

34 702.0 

35 716.0 

36 716.0 

37 703.0 

38 70J5.0 

39 674.0 


509.5 
662.0 
678.9 

697.8 

666.8 

699.6 



700.3 

700.2 


378.8 339.0 

508.0 377.7 

659.9 506.4 

676.7 657.8 

695.5 674.5 

664.5 693.1 

697.2 662.2 

710.9 694.7 

710.7 708.2 

697.5 707.9 


352.0 

338.0 

376.5 
504.8 

655.6 

672.2 

690.7 

659.8 
692.0 
705.4 


40 680.0 671.2 

41 661.0 677.1 

42 676.0 65s.1 

$3 65s.0 672.9 

44 637.O 654.9 

45 629.O 633.« 

46 621.0 625.6 

47 603.0 617.4 

4g 601.0 599.2 

49 573.0 596.9 


697.3 694.6 705.0 

662.4 694.4 691.7 

674.1 665.5 691.3 

655.1 671.O 662.4 

669.7 652.0 667.g 

651.6 666.3 64g.7 

630.3 64g.0 662.7 

621.9 626.6 644.2 

613.5 6lg.O 622.6 

595.1 609.3 613.g 


50 560.O 56g.g 

51 54g.O 555.6 

52 520.O 543.4 

53 512.0 515.3 

54 429.0 512.9 

55 491.0 4S3.S 

56 477.0 4g5.3 

57 46g.o 471.0 

52 446.0 461.2 

59 435.0 439.5 


592.5 590.7 604.2 

564.3 527.2 5g6.0 

550.9 559.5 522.2 

532.5 545.9 554.4 

510.3 533.2 540.6 

507.4 504.9 327.5 

472.2 501.6 499.1 

479.2 472.2 495.3 

464.7 472.2 465.9 

455.1 457.9 465.9 


60 

61 

62 



65 

67 

62 

69 


417.0 

396.0 

391.0 

369.0 

361.0 

362.0 

342.0 

334.0 

322.0 

300.0 


427.3 

402.3 

327.7 
322.2 
360.5 

351.7 
351.7 
337.0 
322.2 

309.4 


43!. 7 
412.4 


399.2 

379.6 

373.9 



325.1 

309.6 


447.0 

422.7 

409.6 

391.4 

370.2 

364.2 

341.2 

330.9 

322.6 

312.4 


449.7 

437.7 
413.9 
401.0 


322.3 
361.2 
353.2 

330.4 


319.2 

315.2 



276.0 

252.0 

235.0 

124.0 

190.0 

176.0 

151.0 

133.0 

124.0 

103.0 


227.1 

262.9 

232.6 

221.1 
172.0 
1J6.3 

161.9 

137.7 
120.2 
111.0 



296.3 
222.0 
252.2 

234.2 
209.9 

191.2 

146.2 

147.2 

133.4 

111.4 


299.0 

222.2 

267.0 

243.5 

219.0 

i94.7 

176.4 
133.9 

133.6 

119.4 


20 

92.0 

91.1 

98.2 

95.2 

21 

72.0 

-20.4 

79.6 

* * • 
85.2 

22 

63.O 

67/2 

69.3 

62.6 

11 

50.0 

43.0 

53.5 

41.2 

til 

52.9 

47.7 

25 

35.4 

35.3 

34.4 

36.7 

26' 

26.6 

22.5 

22.5 

27.7 

27 

19.2 

21. C 

22.5 

22.4 

22 

14.5 

15.3 

16.2 

17.4 

29 

9.9 

11.0 

11.6 

12.3 

90 

7.2 

7.4 

2.2 

2.6 

91 

5.4 

5.7 

5.4 

6.0 

92 

3.7 

3.2 

4.0 

3.2 

93 

2.4 

2.6 

2.6 

2.2 

94 

1.6 

1.6 

1.7 

1.2 

95 

1.0 

1.0 

1.0 

1.3 

96 

97 

.6 

.3 

.6 

.4 



92 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.2 

99 

.1 

.1 

.1 

.1. 


a.As of 1 January of each year. 


92.6 

23.2 

73.9 

52.3 

49.2 

39.2 
29.6 

21.9 

17.4 

13.2 


9.2 

6.3 

4.2 
2.6 
1.9 

1.2 

.2 

.1 


Appendix A. THE PROJECTED POPULATION OF GERMANY, 1945 

F EMAL ES 
(in thousands) 


A250-- -125.1 _J152_1 953 19^4 1955 1956 1957 1952 1959 I960 


466.2 

443.9 

442.0 

461.7 

479.7 

627.7 
522.0 

llii 

732.6 


463-7 

440.6 

440.2 

446.2 

460.4 
472.£ 

626.4 
520.9 
551.1 

621.4 


462.6 

432.2 
437.0 

432.4 

444.9 

459.3 

477.5 

625.2 

579.9 

550.3 


460.5 

437.2 

434.6 

435.3 
437.1, 
443. $ 

452.3 

476.6 
624.1 
579.0 


465.2 

435.2 
433.6 

Kf :5 

*+57.4 

^75.8 

623.2 


474.2 

440.2 

431.6 

431.9 

431.7 

432.9 

till 

456.6 

475.1 


483.9 
448.1 

436.6 

429.9 

430.7 
430.6 

432.0 

till 

455.9 


494.7 

SK:S 

434.9 

428.7 

429.6 

429.7 
431.2 

58:1 


p.\ 

28:2 

433.6 

427.6 

428.7 
428.9 
430.5 
433.0 


520.4 

k:°7 

till 

till 

427.9 
428.2 

429.9 


534.0 

491.8 

475.1 

461.9 
490.4 

440.2 

431.6 

425.9 

427.2 

427.6 


72s. 8 731.7 680.5 

661.0 72S.O 730.9 

625.8 660.3 727.2 

926.3 625.2 659.6 

619.7 625.7 624.6 

591.8 619.0 625.0 

491.3 591.O 618.2 

503.9 490.6 59O.I 

522.5 503.0 489.7 

573.0 521.5 502.O 


549.6 578.3 622.4 

679.7 549.0 577.6 

730.1 679.O 548.4 

726.5 729.4 678.3 

658.9 725.8 728.6 

623.9 658.1 725.0 

624.2 623.1 657.2 

617.3 623.3 622.2 

589.1 616.2 622.2 

488.7 587.9 615.0 


474.5 

621.7 


577.0 

547.9 

677.6 

727.8 

724.1 

656.2 
621.1 
621.0 


455.3 439.9 

474.0 454.8 

621.1 473.5 

576.4 620.5 

547.3 575.8 

676.8 546.7 

726.9 675.9 

723.0 725.8 

655.0 721.7 

619.9 653.7 


432.4 429.3 

439.4 431.9 

454.3 438.9 

473.0 453.9 

619.9 472.5 

575.1 619.2 

546.0 574.4 

674.9 545.2 

724.5 673.7 

720.3 723.1 


569.1 
588.3 

575.0 

599.2 
030.5 

621.3 
624.0 

653.3 
691.6 
701.2 


571.s 

567.8 

586.9 

573.6 

597.7 

628.9 

619.6 

622.3 

651.4 

689.6 


520.4 



572.1 

596.1 

627.2 
617.9 
620.5 
649.5 


500.9 487.7 586.7 

519.2 499.8 486.6 

569.1 518.0 498.6 

565.0 567.7 516.7 

583.9 563.6 566.2 

570.6 582.4 562.1 

594.5 569.1 580.8 

625.4 592.8 567.5 

616.1 623.6 591.1 

618.7 6l4.3 621.8 


613.7 619.7 618.6 

585.4 612.3 618.3 

485.4 584.0 610.8 

497.4 484.2 582. S 

515.4 496.1 4s3.o 

5b4.7 514.1 494.8 

560.6 563.2 512.7 

579.2 559.0 561.6 

565.? 577.5 557.4 

589.4 564.3 575.8 


652.3 718.8 

617.2 650.8 

616.8 615.7 

609.3 615.3 

581.0 607.7 

481.7 579.5 

493.5 480.4 

511.3 492.1 

560.0 509.8 

555.8 558.4 


527.5 

699.1 

687.6 

647.6 

616.9 

612.5 

350.9 

525.9 

697.0 

685.5 

645.7 

615.0 

337.0 

349.2 

5?4.3 

694.8 

623.4 

643.7 

375.3 

335.9 

348.7 

522.6 

692.6 

681.2 

5° 3.1 

374.1 

334.8 

347.5 

520.9 

690.3 

653.4 

501.4 

37?.'8 

333.7 

346.3 

519.1 

670.0 

651.1 

499.7 

371.5 

332.5 

345.1 

688.2 

657.3 

667.6 

625.6 

648.7 

665.O 

till 

370.2 

496.0 

333.-3 

36S.S 

689.2 

654.7 

682.9 

662.3 

643.6 

494.0 


620.0 587.7 562. 

610.7 61s.1 585. 

613.0 608.8 616. 

641.6 611.0 606. 

679.0 639.6 609. 

688.0 676.7 637. 

517.3 685.6 674. 

343.8 515.4 683. 

330.0 342.5 513. 

367.3 328.7 341. 


6 574.1 554.2 

9 561.0 572.4 

2 584.1 559.3 

8 614.2 582.2 

0 604.8 612.2 

3 606.9 602.8 

3 635.3 6o4.S 

1 671.9 632.8 

4 680.5 669.3 

1 511.5 677.8 


702.5 686.4 652.O 
702.O 699.5 683.5 
6s 8.6 69s.9 696.4 
688.3. 685.5 695.7 

659.2 685.8 682.1 
664.4 655.9 681.3 

645.2 660.8 652.3 
65s.8 641.4 656.9 
64o.l 654.6 6^7.3 

618.3 635.7 650.1 


680.1 

649.2 
680.8 

693.2 

692.4 

678.6 

677.6 

648.5 

652.7 

632.9 


659.6 

S2:f 

677.4 

689.9 

688.9 

674.9 

12:1 

642.2 


641.0 

656.2 

674.2 

643.3 

674.2 

686.4 

685.3 
670.9 

669.3 
640.0 


492.0 

638.3 

§53.9 

671.1 

640.2 

670.5 
682.7 
681.1 

666.6 

664.7 


365. 

489: 


<-2 
^9.9 
635.5 

650.9 

667.9 
637.0 

667.1 

672.7 

676.2 
662.0 


327-4 339.7 

764.3 326.0 

$-27.7 362.7 

632.6 4g5.5 

647.2 629.6 

664.5 644.5 

633.5 660.9 

663.2 629.2 

67M. 659.0 

672.2 669.2 


509.3 

332.3 
324.6 
361.0 

423.2 

626.4 
641.0 
657.0 

625.2 

654.5 


609.3 
600.0 
521.0 
577.5 

549.0 
534-. 9 

521.4 
492.9 

422.7 

459.1 


613.7 

604.5 

594.9 

575.7 

571.9 

543.2 

522.7 

514.9 

426.3 

421.6 


631.O 

602.2 

599.4 

529.5 

570.1 
,5^5.2 

536.9 

522.1 
502.0 
479.2 


645.3 

626.0 

603.6 
594.0 

523.7 

564.0 

559.3 
530.2 

515.1 

500.6 


622.2 

640.2 

620.7 

592.1 

522.2 

577.5 

557.5 
552.3 
523.1 

507.6 


643.4 

623.2 

634.2 

615.1 

592.3 
521.9 

570.2 



515.5 


635.3 

659.8 

657.1 

667.2 

664.9 

638.3 

630.3 

654.6 

651.9 

661.9 

617.9 

632.9 

625.0 

649.1 

646.4 

629.1 

612.3 

627.2 

619.3 

643.2 

609.1 

b23.0 

606.3 

621.1 

613.2 

586.0 

602.6 

616.4 

60c.0 

6i4.5 

575.2 

579.2 

595.7 

609.3 

593.1 

563.7 

568.0 

572.0 

522.2 

601.7 

543.2 

556.2 

560.4 

564.4 

5*0.4 

537.0 

535.3 

548.1 

552.2 

556.2 


45 7 *6 

44o.3 

422.5 

405.2 

391.7 



312.2 

306.2 


302.3 

224.2 

267.2 
251.2 
227.7 
203.2 


1J9.1 
160.9 
121.1 
119.6 


105.6 

26.1 


n.7 

62.2 
42.7 

40.4 
3!.6 

23.4 

16.9 

13.2 


9.2 
6.7 
4.4 

2.9 

1.2 
1.2 

:l 

.2 

.1 


$50.9 

44g.i 


431.1 

419.5 


395.2 
321.6 

361.2 
339.2 



293.6 

227.9 

269.6 

251.4 

234.9 
211.2 


126.9 

161.3 
145.5 

102.4 


105.g 
92.2 
74.2 
60.9 

52.5 
4o.o 

32.6 

24.9 


12.1 

12.2 


9.2 

7.1 
4.7 

3.1 
2.0 

1.2 
• 2 
.4 
.2 
.1 


473.0 

470.7 

491.7 

492.6 

506.3 

527.4 

525.2 

532.3 

542.4 

441.5 

463.1 

460.9 

421.5 

422.2 

^95.7 

516.4 

514.2 

527.1 

432.7 

432.3 

453. * 

451.3 

471.4 

472.0 

425.3 

505.6 

504.0 

422.0 

429.5 

423.2 

443.9 

44l.g 

461.5 

462.0 

475.1 

495.O 

409.2 

412.2 

$19.5 

413.4 

$33.6 

431.6 

450.2 

457.2 

464.1 

325.6 

399.2 

401.6 

402.7 

402.7 

422.4 

420.5 

439.2 

445.4 

370.7 

374.6 

327.2 

390.1 

397.0 

391.2 

410.4 

402.5 

426.7 

350.3 

359.0 

362.7 

375.5 

377.7 

324.4 

372.2 

397.4 

395.6 

327.2 

332.0 

346.4 

349.9 

362.3 

364.4 

370.9 

365.5 

323.4 

317.6 

315.0 

324.2 

332.9 

336.3 

342.2 

350.2 

356.4 

351.3 

293.3 

304.0 

301.5 

310.9 

312.6 

321.9 

333.3 

335.2 

341.1 

279.6 

279.3 

229.5 

227.1 

296.1 

303.4 

306.6 

317.4 

319.2 

272.6 

264.7 

264.4 

274.] 

271.2 

220.3 

227.2 

290.3 

300.5 

253.7 

256.5 

249.1 

242.2 

257.9 

255.7 

263.7 

270.2 

273.1 

235.0 

237.2 

239.2 

232.9 

232.6 

2*1.1 

239.1 

246.5 

252.6 

217.9 

212.0 

220.0 

222.5 

216.1 

215.2 

223.7 

221.2 

222.7 

194.2 

200.4 

200.5 

202.3 

204.6 

192.7 

192.5 

205.7 

204.0 

170.4 

177.1 

122.2 

122.2 

124.5 

126.6 

121.2 

121.0 

127.6 

147.6 

154.0 

160.1 

165.3 

165.3 

166.2 

162.7 

163.2 

163.6 

130.2 

132.1 

137.9 

143.3 

142.0 

142.0 

149.3 

151.0 

146.6 

95.? 

115.2 

116.9 

122.0 

126.2 

131.0 

131.0 

132.1 

133.6 

92.4 

23.2 

1-00.6 

102.1 

106.6 

110.2 

114.4 

114.4 

115.4 

79.5 

79.6 

72.2 

26.7 

22.0 

91.9 

95.5 

92.6 

92.6 

63.0 

o7.5 

67.6 

61.3 

73.6 

74.7 

72.1 

21.1 

23.7 

50.9 

r 2 * 7 

56.4 

56.5 

51.2 

61.5 

62.4 

65.3 

67.2 

43.1 

41. 3 

43.3 

46.4 

46.4 

42.1 

50.5 

51.3 

53; 7 

32.3 

34.2 

33.7 

34.9 

37.4 

37.4 

33.9 

4o.f 

*1.4 

25.7 

25.5 

27.5 

26.6 

27..5 

29.5 

29.5 

26.7 

32.1 

19.2 

!?•? 

19.7 

21.3 

20.6 

21.3 

22.2 

22.2 

20.6 

13.2 

14.6 

15.3 

15.0 

16.2 

15.7 

16.2 

17.3 

17.3 

9.5 

io.3 

10.9 

11.2 

11.2 

12.0 

11.7 

12.0 

12.9 

7.1 

6.9 

7.4 

7.9 

.2.1 

2.1 

2.7 

8.5 

2.7 

5.1 

5.0 

4.9 

5.3 

5.6 

5.7 

5.7 

6.2 

6.0 

3.2 

3.5 

3.5 

3.4 

3.6 

3.? 

4.0 

4.0 

4.2 

2.1 

2.2 

2.3 

2.3 

2.3 

2.4 

2.6 

2.7 

2.7 

1.3 

1.3 

i.4 

1.5 

1.5 

1.5 

1.6 

1.7 

1.7 

.7 

. 2 

.2 

.9 

1.0 

l.o 

.9 

1.0 

1.1 

.5 

.4 

.5 

£ 

• y 

.6 

.6 

.6 

.6 

.6 

7 

• y 

.3 

.3 

.3 

.3 

.3 

.4 

.4 

.3 

.1 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.? 

.2 

.2 


TO 1975, a BY sex and single year of age 


CONFIDENTIAL 


A&1, .1961_lj)62 _ ] 961 1964 .1965--. 1.966 1967 1Q 6 2 1969 1970 IQ71 tq 7 p 1073 1974 1975 


0 

1 

2 

l 


1 

2 

9 


546.7 

504.6 

427.2 

till 

W9.3 

f+39.3 

430.8 

425.2 

426.6 


560.7 

516.6 

500.4 
485.9 

471.8 

till 

438.4 
430.1 

424.6 


579.0 

529.9 



596.1 

5^7.2 

525.5 

510.3 
497.0 

423.3 

469.6 

tin 

^37.1 


611.3 

563.3 
5^2.7 

523.^ 
50s. 8 
495.8 

482.3 

468.7 

456.8 

445.9 


621.2 

577.7 

552.7 
540.5 
521.9 

m 

421.4 

till 


633.6 

587.0 

572.9 

556.5 

538.9 

520.6 
506.4 
493.7 
480.6 
467.2 


647.3 
59S.8 
58?. 2 

570.6 
55*1.9 

537.6 


519.5 

505.4 

49?.9 

**79.9 


651.9 

611.7 


593.9 

579.9 
569.0 



518.5 

504.5 

492.2 


654.2 
616.0 

606.7 

591.5 
578.? 

567.6 

552.3 

535.4 

517.6 

503.8 


651.2 

618.2 
610.9 
6o4.-* 

589.8 

576.8 
566.4 

551.2 
53*1-5 

516.8 


648.9 644.8 

615.4 613.2 

613.1 610.3 

608.5 610.7 

602.6 606.7 

588.3 601.1 

575.6 587.0 

565.3 574.5 

550.3 564.3 

533.7 5*19.5 


633.4 622.2 
609.3 598.6 

608.2 604.3 

607.9 605.8 

605.9 606.1 

605.2 607.4 

599.8 603.9 

585.9 598.6 
573-5 58*1.9 

563.5 572.7 


10 427.1 426.1 

11 428.8 426.6 

12 431.5 428.4 

13 438.8 431.1 

14 453.4 438.0 

15 *172.0 452.9 

16 618.4 471.4 

17 573-5 617.5 

IS 5*14.2 572.5 

19 672.4 543.1 


424.1 429.0 436.5 

425.6 423.6 428.5 

426.2 425.2 423.2 

428.0 425.8 424.8 

430.7 427.6 425.4 

*137.5 *130.2 427.1 

452.3 *136.9 *129.6 

470.7 451.6 436.2 

616.4 469.9 450.8 

571.*1 615.2 469.0 


till 

422.1 

422.2 
4?4.4 

424.9 
426.5 
422.Q 
*135.*1 

449.9 



428.1 

*+3*1.5 


** 66.6 

ft? 

j+35-1 
^7.3 
421.9 

^3.3 
^3.7 
425.2 
**27.3 


*1J9.3 

466.1 

454.5 

448.9 

*134.7 

426.8 

421.4 
422.7 
423.0 

424.4 


*191.6 

478.8 
*165.6 

454.1 
443.4 

434.2 

426.2 

420.8 
422.0 

422.2 



516.1 

502.6 

490.5 
*177.8 

464.6 
*+53.! 
442.3 

432.9 

424.9 
*119.3 


533.0 5*18.8 562.8 

515.5 532.*1 5**8.2 

802.1 515.O 531.8 
490.0 501.6 514.5 
*177.3 489.5 501.1 

464.1 476.8 488.9 
*152.5 *+63.5 *176.2 

441.6 451.8 462.8 

432.1 440.8 451.0 

424.1 431.2 439.9 


20 

721.6 

671.0 

541.9 

570.2 

613.9 

462.0 

442.9 

433.6 

21 

717.2 

720.0 

669.5 

540.7 

56s.? 

612.5 

466.9 

447.9 

22 

64?. 2 

715.5 

718.3 

667.9 

539.4 

567.5 

611.0 

**65.8 

23 

614.2 

647.6 

713.7 

716.5 

666.2 

532.1 

566.1 

609.5 

24 

613.7 

612.6 

645.9 

J11.9 

71*1.7 

664.5 

536.7 

564.7 

P5 

6ofa.i 

612.1 

611.0 

644.2 

710.0 

712.2 

662.2 

R7C 1 

J v ) 0 > 

26 

577.9 

6o4.5 

610.4 

609.4 

642.5 

702.] 

710.9 

661.0 

27 

479.1 

576.3 

602.8 

602.7 

607.7 

640.7 

706.1 

702.9 

22 

*190.7 

$77.7 

57*1.6 

601.1 

607.0 

606.0 

632.9 

704.1 

29 

508.3 

429.3 

476.3 

572.9 

599. *i 

605.2 

604. 2 

637.0 


4p6.4 

4 ? 3-5 

421.3 

420.3 

418.4 

423.? 

430.3 

432.6 

425.4 

422.5 

4?0.3 

419-3 

417.5 

422.2 

446.8 

*131.6 

424.4 

421.5 

*119.3 

418.3 

416.5 

464.6 

4%.7 

450.5 

*♦23.3 

420.4 

418.3 

*117.3 

607.9 

463.4 

444.6 

429.4 

422.2 

*+19.3 

417.2 

563.2 

606.3 

462.2 

443.4 

428.3 

421,1 

4is.? 

533.9 

561.7 

6o4.7 

461.0 

442.2 

427.1 

4?0.0 

659.1 

532.*» 

560.1 

603.0 

459.7 

44i.O 

425.9 

706.9 

657.2 

530.9 

558-5 

6OI.3 

458.4 

1+39-7 

70?. 1 

704.8 

655.3 

529.4 

556.9 

599.6 

*157.1 


30 

556.7 

506.2 

31 

552.5 

555.0 

32 

57C.6 

550.2 

33 

557.5 

562.2 

34 

580.3 

555.7 

35 

610.1 

572.? 

36 

600.7 

602.0 

37 

60?. 6 


32 

630.4 

600.-3 

39 

666.6 

6?7.9 


487.9 *17*1.9 571.2 

505.3 486.4 473.5 

553.3 503.7 **s4.o 

549.0 58I.5 502.1 

566.9 547.2 549.7 

553-8 565.0 545.4 

576.3 551.9 563.0 

608.8 874.2 549.9 

596.2 603.5 572.0 

597.9 593.8 601.1 


597.6 603.4 

669.5 595.8 

472.0 567.7 

483.3 470.5 

500.4 481.7 

547.8 49s.7 

5*f3.5 545.9 

561.0 541.5 

547.8 888.9 

569.7 545.6 


602.4 635.1 

601.6 600.6 
59*+.0 599.7 

565.9 592.1 

46?..9 564.0 

480.1 467.3 

497.0 478.4 

543.? 485.2 

539.4 54i.s 

556.7 537.2 


700.0 702.7 

633-2 §97.9 

598.7 631.2 

597.8 596.8 

590.1 595.8 

562.1 5S8.1 

468.7 560.1 

476.7 464.0 

493.3 *174.9 

539.6 491.3 


653.4 827.8 

700.6 651.4 

695.7 698.4 

629.2 693.5 

594.8 627.1 

893.8 592.8 

586.1 591.7 

888.1 584.0 

462.2 556.0 

473.0 460.4 


555.3 597.8 

826.2 553.6 

649.4 524.6 

696.2 647.3 

691.2 693.9 
625.0 688.9 

590.7 622.8 

589.0 588.6 

581.8 587.3 
553-8 579-5 


40 

675.0 

663.9 

41 

507.2 

672.? 

42 

336.8 

505.0 

$3 

323.1 

335.3 

44 

IS 

359.3 

480.8 

6?3.0 

321.6 
357.5 
!+7S. ? 

47 

637.2 

619.3 

42 

65?.8 

633-2 

49 

6?1.5 

648.3 


625.3 595.4 591.4 

661.1 622.7 592.9 

669.2 658.2 620.0 

502.7 666.1 655.2 

333.7 500.3 662.9 

320.0 332.O 497.8 

355.5 318.3 330.2 

475.4 353.4 316.4 

615.4 472.4 351.2 

628.9 611.2 469.2 


598.6 567.4 543.4 

588.9 596.1 565.0 

590.3 586.3 593-5 

617.2 587.6 581.6 

652.1 6l4.2 5S4.S 

659.5 648.8 611.1 

495.1 655.9 645.3 

328.3 492.2 652.0 

314.4 J26.2 489.1 

348.8 312.2 324.0 


554.4 535.0 537.4 

541.1 552.1 582.7 

562.5 538.7 549.7 

590.8 559.9 536.2 

580.8 5S8.O 557.2 

581.8 577.9 5S5.O 

607.8 578.6 574.7 

641.5 6o4.2 575.2 

647.9 637.4 600.4 

485.7 643.5 633.O 


489.3 

535.1 

530.4 

547.2 

533.6 

554.4 
581.8 

571.3 

571.6 

596.3 


471.1 458.5 551.5 

487.2 469.1 446.6 
532.7 485.1 467.0 
528.0 530.3 482.9 

544.6 525.5 527.8 

530.9 541.8 522.8 

551.4 528.O 53S.S 

578.4 548.2 524.9 

5§ 7 .7 574.7 544.7 

567.7 5b3.8 57°.8 


50 

649.7 

616.9 

643.5 

51 

659.6 

644.6 

61?.0 

52 

656.3 

654.0 

639.1 

53 

640.6 

650.4 

648.1 

5* 

636.9 

63*1.3 

644.0 

55 

60b. 7 

630.1 

6?7.6 

56 

607.4 

599.7 

6S2.8 

57 

525.7 

599.8 

592.2 

52 

593.7 

577.9 

591.8 

59 

571.9 

585. C 

569.5 

60 

5*16.3 

561.7 

57**.6 

61 

531.1 

53*+.9 

550.0 

62 

516.1 

5?0.0 

523.7 

6 < 

493.4 

505.3 
4s?.0 

509.1 

6* 

*183.5 

433.6 

469.6 
*157.6 

fi 

67 

45?. 1 
^32.7 

471.0 

439.2 

413.2 

419.0 

425-3 

62 

3*1.7 

398.6 

404.2 

69 

36S.5 

366.8 

383.1 


70 

336.2 

352.7 

351.1 

71 

324.9 

320.2 

335.9 

72 

7? 

302.2 

222.7 

307.6 

284.3 

303.1 

229.4 

74 

75 

255.3 

234.3 

264.3 

236.8 

265.2 

245.2 

76 

210.3 

215.5 

217.2 

77 

126.0 

191.8 

196.5 

72 

169.6 

168.? 

173.4 

79 

146.4 

151.8 

150.6 


20 

129.7 

129.5 

13^.3 

21 

116.7 

113.3 

113.1 

22 

99.5 

100.6 

97.6 

23 

23.7 

24.5 

25.4 

24 

70.0 

70.0 

70.6 

u 

55.7 

43.3 

57.5 

44.9 

m 

27 

32.7 

34.2 

35.4 

22 

24.2 

25.3 

26.4 

29 

15.7 

12.2 

19.2 

90 

12.9 

n.7 

14.0 

91 

9.4 

9.4 

2.5 

92 

6.2 

6.7 

6.7 

93 

4.1 

4.3 

4.6 

94 

2.2 

2.2 

2.9 

95 

1.7 

1.9 

1.2 

96 

1.] 

1.1 

1.2 

97 

.6 

.7 

.7 

92 

.4 

.4 

.4 

99 

•«- 

.2 

.2 


624 t 
638.4 
606.8 


14.3 

10.2 

6.0 

4.6 

3.1 
1.9 

1.1 

:l 

.2 


606.7 

619.4 

633.0 

601.3 


465.7 
601.9 
6l4.2 


i4.q 

10.4 

7.2 

4.1 

3.1 

2.0 

1.2 

:l 

.2 


15.5 

10.2 

7.4 

5.0 

2.2 

2.0 

1.3 

.2 


346.2 
462.0 

596.2 
> 02.6 


641.2 

627.1 

595.4 

621.2 

637.2 

635.0 

620.4 

529.1 

620.4 

629.9 

627.7 

613.3 

6I5.O 

612.6 

622.0 

619.2 

524.3 

606.2 

6o4.4 

613.7 

523.2 

575.2 

592.0 

595.6 

559.$ 

572.2 

565.6 

527.4 

562.6 

547.7 

56O.9 

553.2 

532.5 

550.2 

536.2 

5*9.2 

512.7 

527.2 

539.2 

524.9 

$97.3 

420.9 

500.2 
424.5 

515.0 

427.9 

526.7 

501.7 

456.2 

467.2 

470.7 

474.0 

443.1 

441.7 

452.4 

$55.2 

410.J 

427.5 

426.1 

436.5 

322.4 

394.3 

410.2 

409.5 

366.7 

371.7 

377.4 

393.2 

33*+. 4 

349.2 

354.0 

359.4 

312.0 

316.6 

330.6 

335.1 

225.2 

299.2 

297.9 

311.1 

270.6 

266.6 

279.7 

272.5 

£46.6 

251.0 

247.3 

259.5 

225.5 

226.2 

230.2 

227.4 

192.6 

205.6 

206.2 

210.5 

177.6 

179.5 

125.9 

127.0 

155.2 

159.0 

160.7 

166.4 

133.3 

!37.3 

140.7 

142.2 

117.3 

116.4 

119.9 

122.9 

97.5 

101.1 

* 100.3 

103.3 

22.9 

22.6 

25.9 

25.2 

71.4 

69.3 

69.2 

71.2 

52.0 

52.7 

57.0 

56.9 

46.4 

46.2 

47.3 

46.0 

36.6 

36.6 

36.9 

37.3 

27.4 

22.3 

22.3 

22.5 

20.1 

20.2 

21.5 

21.5 


16.O 

11.3 

7.7 

5.1 
3.4 

1.2 
1.3 

.2 

.4 

.2 


309.9 321.6 

343.5 307.4 

45s.1 340.6 

591.4 454.0 

602.7 5*5.6 

614.6 596.3 

562.3 607.5 

605.6 575.O 

611.5 597.5 

604.8 602.6 


482.1 638.7 

319.1 478.? 

3 o 4 .s 316.4 

337.5 302.0 

449.6 334.2 

599.4 444.8 

589.4 572.7' 

599.9 5*2.0 

567.3 591.9 

588.8 559.0 


628.3 591.9 

633.6 623.3 

474.3 628.2 

313.5 470.0 

299.0 310.4 

330.6 295.8 

439.7 326.8 

565.5 434.2 

574.2 558.0 

583.3 565.8 


563.5 559.6 

587.2 559.0 

618.0 582.2 

622.5 612.4 

465.4 616.4 
307.1 460.5 

292.4 303.6 
322.7 288.7 

428.4 318.4 
550.0 422.2 


5*5.0 
575. 2 
542.2 

537.7 

512.7 


513.1 

*+87.4 

459.0 

439.7 

419.5 


391.9 
374.5 

340.2 

315.3 

290.9 
25S. 4 
238.7 

207.4 
190. 
167. 


I 


147.2 

124.2 

105.9 

27.7 

71.2 

59.0 

45.9 

36.3 
22.2 

21.7 

16.0 

11.6 

2.0 


2.2 

1.1 

.2 

.5 

r* 


594.0 

572.2 

563.2 

530.2 
$25.2 
$99.5 
493.5 


591.9 

521.6 

560.2 

551.4 

512.5 

511.6 
425.3 


572.3 

mi 

549.0 

532.6 

505.1 

497.0 


549.0 

566.2 

567.5 

557.4 

536.3 

524.7 

$90.7 


572.9 

55^4 

mi 

522.5 


555.7 

561.0 

526.4 
5,42.8 

542.7 

530.5 

507.6 


540.0 

544.1 

549.3 

515.3 

530.2 
528.7 

515.4 

491.5 


442.2 

455.4 

465.7 

453.3 

464.3 

*+?8.4 

$76.1 

422.6 

425.5 

437.6 

447.5 

435.6 

446.? 

440.5 

401.5 

404.5 

407.2 

4lb. 2 

422.3 

4l6.? 

427.1 

373.2 

322.4 

325.2 

327.2 

392.9 

407.? 

39J.1 

354.5 

353.3 

362.0 

364.7 

367.1 

377.6 

326.2 

320.1 

333.6 

332.4 

340.6 

343.1 

345.4 

355.3 

294.2 

299.3 

311.9 

310.2 

312.4 

320.2 

322.9 

269.9 

2/3.5 

277.7 

229.3 

222.3 

295.4 

297.6 

237.6 

242.2 

251.5 

255.4 

266.1 

265.1 

271.7 

217.7 

216.7 

226.3 

229.4 

232.9 

242.7 

241.2 

127.5 

196.2 

195.9 

204.6 

207.4 

210.6 

219.4 

170.3 

167.2 

176.2 

175.4 

123.1 

125.7 

122.5 

l4g.l 

150.7 

142.5 

155.9 

155.2 

162.0 

164.3 

122.6 

129.4 

131.6 

129.7 

136.2 

135.6 

141.5 

107.0 

110.2 

111.5 

113.4 

111.2 

117.4 

116.9 

29.9 

90.9 

9$.l 

94.7 

96.3 

95.0 

99.7 

73.3 

75.1 

76.0 

72.7 

79.2 

20.5 

79.4 

52.5 

60.2 

61.7 

62.5 

64.7 

65.1 

66.2 

*7.6 

47.2 

42.5 

49.2 

50.4 

52.2 

52.5 

36.2 

37.6 

37.2 

32.3 

39.3 

39.2 

41.2 

22.1 

22.0 

29.1 

22.2 

29.6 

30.4 

30.2 

21.9 

21.4 

21.3 

22.1 

21.9 

22.5 

23.1 

16.1 

16.3 

15.9 

15.2 

16.4 

16.3 

16.7 

11.6 

n.7 

11.2 

11.5 

11.5 

11.9 

11.2 

2.2 

2.2 

2.3 

2.4 

2.2 

2.2 

2.4 

5.5 

5.7 

5.7 

5.7 

5.2 

5.6 

5.6 

3.5 

3.7 

3.2 

3.2 

3.2 

3.9 

3.2 

2.2 

2.$ 

2.4 

2.5 

2.5 

2.5 

2.5 

1.4 

1.4 

1.5 

1.5 

1.6 

1.6 

1.6 

.7 

.2 

.9 

.9 

.9 

1.0 


.5 

.4 

.5 

.5 

.5 

.6 

9 .6 

.3 

.3 

. 2 

.3 

.3 

1 

• / 

.3 


CONFIDENTIAL 























































































































































































































CONFIDENTIAL 


Appendix A. THE PROJECTED POPULATION OF GERMANY, 19IJ5 TO 1975, a BY SEX AND SINGLE YEAR OF AGE 

MALES 
{In thousands) 


1945 Military 
Age (Normal) Deaths 


0 

1 

2 

l 


7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

i 1 * 

15 

16 
17 
IS 

19 

20 
21 
22 

% 

25 

26 
27 

2S 

29 

30 

s 

ll 

n 

3* 

39 

40 

41 

42 

ll 

45 

46 

47 


713.9 

625.2 

534.9 
721. S 

773.2 
763.7 
694.0 
656.O 
654.0 
649.0 


6lS. 0 
514.0 
524.0 

545.0 

595.0 

Iio)o 

654)0 


646.0 

649.0 

679.0 

724.0 

736.0 

561.0 

369.0 

357.0 

394.0 

525.0 


670.0 

639.0 

712.0 

631.0 

711.0 

724.0 

724.0 

711.0 

707.0 

677.0 


631.0 

660.0 

676.0 

653.0 

623.0 

534.0 

545.0 

509.O 


48 

485.0 

49 

451.0 

50 

431.0 

51 

425.0 

52 

408.0 

53 

412.0 

54 

394.0 

55 

395.0 

56 

391.0 

57 

3**.o 

5* 

370.0 

59 

365.0 

60 

353.0 

61 

337.0 

62 

333.0 


320.0 

64 

311.0 

65 

312.0 

66 

300.0 


292.0 

6g 

279.0 

69 

263.0 

70 

24i.o 

71 

220.0 

72 

203.0 

73 

161.0 

74 

163.0 


150.0 

76 

127.0 

77 

111.0 

7* 

100.0 

79 

82.0 

80 

71.0 

31 

60.0 

82 

47.0 

f? 

37.0 

34 

31.0 

*5 

24.2 

86 

17.9 

*7 

13.1 

88 

9.2 

*9 

6.3 

90 

4.6 

91 

3.2 

92 

2.1 

9 ? 

1.3 

94 

.9 


.5 

96 

.3 

97 

.2 

98 

.1 

99 

.1 


xll 

273 

235 

294 

324 

341 

215 
135 

132 
151 
139 

216 
207 

193 

133 

III 

33 

31 

31 

27 

25 

13 

3 


l 


9 

9 

3 

3 

5 

5 

1 

3 

5 

3 

7 

5 

7 

3 

5 

✓ 

5 
1 
2 

3 

3 

9 

3 

6 
1 


9 

3 

2 

3 


Normal 

After 

Military 

Deaths 


13.9 
25.2 
5^4.9 
721.3 
773.2 

ikl 

656.O 

654.0 

649.0 

613.0 

514.0 

524.0 

545.0 

595*0 

llo'.Q 

596.1 

552.1 

490.7 

372.7 

363.5 

334.5 
399.9 

394.2 

345.5 

233.7 

224.3 

242.5 

335.3 


453.2 

431.5 

513.7 

492.5 
536.9 

561.3 

Iff: 1 

633.1 

633.7 


649.4 

623.9 

643.3 

632.4 

614.1 

575.2 

537.3 
504.2 
435.0 
451.0 

431.0 
425.0 
403.0 
4l2. 0 
394.0 
395.0 
391.0 
533.0 
370.0 
365.0 


353.0 
337.0 
333.0 
320. Q 
311.0 
312.0 
300.0 
292.0 

279.0 

263.0 


1946 1947 _ 1943 194-9 1950 _ 1951 1952 1953 ,1954 1955 1956 1957 1953 1959 I960 Age 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1963 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 


543.0 

669.6 

619.4 

5*2.3 

719.3 

is:? 

m 

652.9 


64s. o 

617.2 
n?.fi 

mi 

594.2 
591.1 

603.3 

594.3 
550.7 


525.? 

510.4 

616.6 
5*0.3 

717.3 

769.3 

765.3 

691.1 

653.6 

651.9 

647.1 

616.4 

512.3 

522.3 

543.7 

593.3 
590.0 

607.5 

593.3 


503.4 
439.3 

m 

614.5 
578.7 

715.6 

767.7 

763.8 

629.9 


^99.5 
{*■73-5 

485.3 

503.4 

652.1 

612.8 

577.4 

714.1 

766.2 

762.5 


495.8 

465.2 

469.1 

423.1 
5°1.7 

656.3 

611.4 

576.2 
712.7 

764.9 


429.4 

371.6 

362.4 

383.4 

398.7 

m 

233.0 

223.6 

241.7 


549 

422 

3* 
39 

8 


.2 
33.0 
0.5 

361.3 
3*2.3 

397.5 
1.3 

343.5 

232.3 
222.9 


652.6 

651.0 

646.3 

615.7 

512.2 
522.1 

542.3 

592.2 

533.7 
606.0 

m 

369.4 

360.2 

381.2 

396.3 

390.6 

342.4 

231.6 


622.9 

651.7 

650.2 
645.6 
615.0 

511.5 

521.3 

541.8 

590.9 

587.3 

604.4 
590.0 
546.0 


l 


>50.9 

649.4 


III: 

4 

5 


.2 
,51.7 
479.9 
H.9 
90.7 
534.8 

559.6 

586.3 

613.6 

630.3 

81:5 

18:1 

622.7 

610.3 

571.4 
534.0 

00.4 
21.1 


l 




447.1 

427.0 

420.7 

403.5 

407.0 

333.3 
3*9.4 
3*5.1 
3*1.6 

363.3 


240.9 

333.1 

450.2 

473.2 
10.0 
33.3 

532.7 

557.3 
.3 

10.9 

627.4 

632.6 
643.0 

622.3 
641.1 

624.8 

606.3 

567.4 
530.0 

496.4 

476.9 

442.9 

422.6 
4i6.0 

iS:f 

3*3.3 
3*3.5 
37*.7 

374.7 


222.2 

240.1 

llli 

476.4 

503.0 

486.9 

530.6 

555.0 

5*1.2 


357.7 35' 
345.3 34 


345I3 

311.0 

301.4 

301.4 
222.2 
220.0 

266.5 


6.1 
349.9 

337.1 
320.6 

315.3 
30l.« 

291.1 

290.? 

277.0 

267.4 


602.1 

624.4 

629.4 

639.5 
612.7 
637.2 

620.7 
602.0 

563.1 
525-7 

492.1 

472.4 
4J8.4 

417.9 
411.0 

393.fi 

395.9 

377.5 

377.2 

371.8 

367.2 
3fiS.fi 
3fil.6 
328.fi 

311.6 
305.5 

291.1 

220.2 

lli.l 


35.2 

368.3 

359.1 
3*0.1 

395.1 
3*9.4 

341.3 

230.9 

221.5 

239.3 

18:? 

474.6 
506.0 

434.9 

525.4 

552.5 

57*.5 

605.2 

621.2 
626.0 

8:5 

S?tf 

597 5 
55*6 

5211 

5Si 

43;. 5 
4l2,8 

405.6 
3«7.* 
3*9.9 

37o!^ 36 


61.3 

38.0 
6« 

64?) 8 

614.2 
510.7 

520.3 

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692.6 69 
6fi7.9 64 


692.6 

639.6 
632.3 

616.9 
603.2 

592.1 

576.2 

558.6 

539.9 


d 

452.4 


5 


6 


26.3 
,55.1 

618.3 

615.5 

609.7 

llkl 

488.6 

506.6 

551.3 


525.7 

512.7 

493.9 
fiS5.7 

8 : 

p. 5 

fi37.7 

fi38.5 

fi38.3 

fi39.fi 

4fil.3 

443.0 

462.1 
480.0 

627.7 
5*4.7 

550.3 

680.2 

728.7 
J23.9 

652.9 

616.1 

613.2 

607.4 
577.0 
47*. 7 

486.5 
504.4 


360.9 

374.7 

368.5 
322.2 

217.5 
208.0 
224.0 

08.6 
15a 
43*. 9 


l 


340.2 

359.2 
372.8 

366.5 

320.3 
216.2 

206.6 

222.4 
06.3 
11.8 


l 


3fi7.7 

338.6 

357.fi 

“^o.g 

36fi.fi 
318.3 
214.8 
205.1 

220.7 

303.8 




490.5 

510.3 

531.3 

552.1 
563.0 

562.9 

5.66.9 
5fi3.2 

553.6 
533.0 

10.4 
70.6 

432.2 

397.6 

374.6 

340.4 
316.8 
303.8 

282.5 
275.5 


l 


448.2 

485.9 

505.1 

525.4 

545.4 
555.6 
55fi.9 

558.3 

534.2 
5fi3.6 

522.fi 

499.3 

459.5 
421.1 

386.4 
363.0 
328.8 

305.9 

291.4 
269.8 


!S:2 

fiso.9 

499.5 

519.0 

538.2 

m 

54?.i 

52fi.5 


532.8 
5H.1 5 

487.5 fi 
447.7 
4°9.3 
3jfi.fi 

359.6 

316.5 

292.5 
278.3 


435.1 

461.5 
439-5 

475.6 

493.5 

512.2 

530.6 
539.fi 

537.5 

539.1 

514.1 

21.2 

,99.0 
475.0 

435.1 

396.6 

361.7 

337.5 

303.5 
279. 1 * 


4-08.2 
4-31.0 

456.8 
434.6 

469.8 
487.0 
504-.9 

522.5 

530.5 

527.8 


528.4 

502.9 

608.9 

fis6.2 
461.7 

421.6 
383.1 
34-8.2 

323.7 

289.9 


ni:l 

336.9 

363.7 

362.2 

316.2 

213.3 

203.6 

218.9 

301.2 

404.4 
4?6.6 

451.7 

429.3 
^63.6 

430.1 
^97.2 

513.9 

520.9 

517.3 

516.9 
4Q1.0 

495.* 

^72.5 

447.4 

407.2 

363.3 

333.9 
309.2 


12.6 

3&: 9 2 

335.1 

m 

359.8 
3lfi.o 

211.7 

202.0 

217.p 
29S.fi 
fioo.3 

421.9 

446.2 

423.7 
457.0 

472.8 
489.0 
504-.6 

510.5 

506.1 

481.9 
^57.9 

432.2 
392.0 

353.7 
31*.9 


552.2 

510.1 

452.6 

342.3 

333.2 

351.2 
364.0 

357.3 

311.6 
210.0 

? 00.2 

215.0 

295.^ 

m 

440.3 
417.7 

450.1 
465.0 

480.1 


564.1 

549.5 

507.5 
fi50.2 5 
3fio.3 fi 

331.8 

348.9 
36l.fi 

354.6 

309.1 


494.6 

i|i:2 

467.0 

442.3 

416.1 

376.0 

337.8 


208.2 

198.3 

212.2 

292.1 

391.1 
fill.3 

434.1 

411.4 

442.7 
456.6 

470.5 

483.9 

487.6 
481.4 

477.9 

450.6 

451.1 

425.8 

399.1 

359.1 


546.8 

561.4 

546.7 
04. g 
47.6 

338.2 

m 

35*. 7 

351.7 

306.4 

206.2 

196.3 

210.4 
288.6 
386.0 

405.5 

m 

434.7 

447.5 
460.3 

472.5 

475.1 

ni:l 

m 

408.fi 

381.2 


548.7 
544.2 
55*. 5 
5%.7 

m 

336.0 

326.7 
343.* 
355.* 


343.6 

303.5 

204.1 

194.1 
207.9 

284.3 
3*0.5 

399.3 

420.5 

397.3 
426.0 

nil 

460.4 
461.3 

419 a 

416.5 
390 a. 


a. Is 'of T'January ’of each year. 


70 

253.6 

261.9 

256.5 

264.6 

265.6 

275.6 

294.0 

303.2 

321.2 

341.4 

362.4 

71 

243.8 

239.9 

247.3 

242.6 

250.3 

251.3 

260.7 

273.1 

286.8 

393.9 

323.0 

72 

230.2 

229.3 

225.6 

233.1 

228.2 

235.4 

236.4 

245.2 

261.6 

269.8 

235.3 

73 

216.3 

215.2 

2i4.3 

210.9 

217.9 

213.3 

220.0 

221.0 

229.2 

244.5 

252.2 

74 

195.2 

201.3 

199.* 

199.0 

195.* 

202.5 

!9*a 

204.3 

205.2 

212.3 

227.O 


130.7 

!7?.8 

135.4 

is4.i 

1*3.3 

130.4 

186.4 

182.5 

188.2 

139.0 

196.0 

76 

162.6 

164.9 

164.1 

169.2 

168.0 

167.3 

164.6 

170.1 

166.5 

171.* 

172.5 

77 

143.5 

146.9 

149. p 

148.3 

152.9 

151.* 

151.2 

143.7 

153.7 

150.5 

155.2 

7* 

129.9 

128.4 

131.4 

133.3 

132.7 

136.8 

135.* 

135.3 

133.0 

137.5 

134.7 

79 

H3.3 

115.0 

113.6 

116.3 

113.0 

117.4 

121.1 

120.2 

119.7 

117.7 

121.7 

80 

99.1 

99.1 

100.6 

99.4 

101.7 

103.2 

102.7 

105.9 

105.1 

104.7 

102.9 

81 

38.7 

85.6 

85.6 

86.8 

85.8 

37.* 

89.1 

88.7 

91.4 

90.7 

90.4 

82 

75. 1 

75.4 

72.3 

72.3 

73.6 

73.° 

74.7 

75.* 

75.4 

77.7 

77a 


63.3 

62.7 

63.0 

60.3 

60.8 

61.5 

61.0 

62.4 

63.3 

63.O 

64.9 

84 

51. 7 

5!.9 

51.4 

5!.6 

49.8 

49.3 

50.4 

50.0 

51.1 

51.9 

51.6 

*5 

41.0 

41.6 

4l.8 

41.4 

41.5 

40.1 

40.1 

4o.6 

4o.2 

41.1 

41.8 

86 

3!.4 


33a 

33.1 

32.8 

32.9 

3 1 -* 

31.3 

32.2 

31.9 

32.6 

*7 

23.6 

24.4 

25.3 

25.7 

25.7 

25.5 

25.6 

24.7 

24.7 

25.0 

24.8 

88 

17.5 

17.9 

13.6 

19.2 

!?.5 

19.5 

19.4 

i?.5 

18.8 

13.8 

19.0 

*9 

11.1 

13.0 

13.3 

13.9 

14.3 

14.5 

14.5 

i4.4 

14.5 

14.0 

14.0 

90 

8.8 

3.1 

9.5 

9.7 

10.1 

10.4 

10.6 

10.6 

10.5 

10.6 

10.2 

91 


6.3 

5.* 

6.3 

6.9 

7.2 

7.4 

7.6 

7.6 

7.5 

7.6 

92 

4.0 

4.4 

4.4 

4.0 

4.7 

4.8 

5.0 

5.1 

5.3 

5.3 

5.2 

9 ? 

2.6 

2.7 

3.0 

3.0 

2.7 

3.2 

3.3 

3.4 

3.5 

3.6 

3.6 

94 

1.7 

1.7 

1.8 

2.0 

2.0 

1.8 

2.1 

2.2 

2.3 

2.3 

2.4 


1.1 

1.1 

1.1 

1.2 

1.3 

1.3 

1.2 

1.4 

1.4 

1.5 

1.5 

96 

.7 

.7 

.7 

• 7 

.3 

.3 

.8 

.8 

.9 

.9 

.9 

97 

.4 

.4 

.4 

.4 

.4 

.5 

.5 

.5 

.5 

.6 

.6 

9* 

.? 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.3 

.3 

.3 

.3 

.4 

99 

a 

a 

a 

a 

a 

a 

a 

.2 

.2 

.2 

.2 


690.1 

641.9 

636.7 

630.1 

615.2 

601.3 

590.3 
575.1 
557.6 


539.1 
525.0 

512.1 
49*. 3 

485.1 

till 

mi 

436.6 


437.3 

437.1 

438.1 
4fio.O 

446.7 

460.7 

478.6 

625.2 
582.9 

548.6 


l 


673.0 

726.3 

21.5 

,50.6 

613.8 

610.3 
605.O 

vh 

424.3 

5p2. 1 

546.1 

5fi1.fi 

m 

493.8 

441.9 

333.6 

324.2 
341.0 

352.7 

345.3 

300.4 

201.3 

191.* 

205.2 

230.8 
374.7 

2.7 
12.9 


£ 


625.2 

64-2.2 

639.1 

8?:? 

628.4 

613.3 

600.5 
5*9.6 

574.1 

556.* 
53*. 4 

524.4 
H.5 

,97.7 

484.5 
4J2.0 
461.0 
4R0.R 
441.4 


5 


K1:S 

438.7 
4fi5.fi 

459.3 

477.1 

623.9 

581.1 

546.9 

675.8 

723.9 

m 

611.4 

608.4 
602.6 

Wd 

482.1 
499.7 

543.3 
53*. 5 

552.3 

537.3 

495.5 

438.3 

331.1 

321.6 


8 


J?2:? 

427.5 

437.9 
4fi7.5 

447.5 

438.0 

430.6 

401.9 

397.8 

370.9 

342.8 

303.8 

267.1 

234.2 

209.1 

178.9 

155.9 

138.9 

119.2 

106.4 

88.8 

Ii:i 

8:1 

iiifi 

18.9 

lfi.l 

10.2 

7.3 

5.3 

li 

1.5 

:l 

.4 

.2 


8.0 

349.fi 

341.8 

297.1 

199.4 

189.3 

202.3 

276.5 

368.5 

385.6 

404.7 

l?d 

fil6.5 

425.6 

433.6 

432.3 

421.7 
413.0 

383.9 

378.2 

350.9 
322.fi 
284.0 
248.0 

215.8 
190.8 
161.7 
139.5 

122.9 


ll : 

S 


673.6 

633.3 

636.8 

636.2 

636.8 

632.3 

626.9 

612.5 

599.3 

583.6 

573.2 

556.1 

537.7 
523.* 

510.9 
497.0 
4*3.7 

471.1 

460.0 

449.4 

440.2 

434.2 

434.3 

434.5 

435.5 

5»:f 

457.9 

475.6 

621.9 

579.3 

545.1 
673.5 
72l.fi 
7i6.fi 

645.7 
609.0 

605.9 

600.1 

569.8 

472.4 

479.3 

497.2 
5fio.4 

535.4 
5fi8.9 
533-8 
fi92.0 


*92 

135 

32S 




31*.* 

334.3 
345.* 
33*.0 

293.5 

196.3 

186.6 

199.2 
271.9 

361.3 


104.3 

91.9 
i. 5 

>2)8 
1 - 2.8 

32.9 
25.7 
!?.3 

14.1 

10.3 

7.3 

3.6 

2.3 
1.5 

.9 

.6 

.4 

.2 


661.7 

627.4 
632.9 

Hi:? 

635.1 

631.3 
625.6 

611.5 

598.3 

587-7 

572.4 

555.4 

537.1 

523.2 

510.2 
1*96.2 

482.8 
470.1 

458.9 


448.2 

439.0 

432.9 

433.5 

SP:1 

436.1 
442.7 

456.5 

474.1 


619.? 

577.4 

543.3 
671a 
71*.7 

m 

606.3 

603.4 

597.4 


567. 

470. 


.2 
70.1 

477.4 

494.5 

537.3 
532.1 

545.3 

530.0 

488.3 
432.0 


377.9 

395.9 

371.9 

ltd 

412.4 

418.8 
4l6.2 

404.4 

394.5 

365.0 

357.8 
330. p 

301.4 

263.7 

222.5 

196.9 

172.4 

144.7 

123.5 


325.5 

315.8 

331.4 

3fi2.0 

333.9 

289.6 
i9fi.o 
183.2 
195-9 
267.0 

354.6 
370.0 
3*6.5 

362.4 
3*5.4 
392.3 
39*. 4 

403.2 

399.2 

3 * 6.2 


375.1 
345.3 
336.5 

30*. 5 

279.9 

242.9 
2CS.5 

177.9 

154.2 
123.1 


If:! I 

8:1 5 


107.5 
90.0 
'8.1 
>3.1 
12.6 
^.5 

11:1 

K:s 

10.3 

7.3 
5.1 

1:5 

1.5 

:? 

.4 

.2 


108.0 

92.3 

6.5 

5.2 
1.7 

2.3 

Id 

10.5 

7.3 
5.1 

3.5 

2.3 

1.5 

:l 

.4 

.2 


CONFIDENTIA L 

















































































































































































































































CONFIDENTIAL 


Appendix B. THE PROJECTED POPULATION OF GERMANY, 1945 TO 1975, BY SEX AND FIVE-YEAR AGE-GROUP 

MALES 


Year 

0-4 

5-9 

10-14 

15-19 

20-24 

25-29 

30-34 

1939 

1945 

mu 

2794.1 

3421.7 

3164.g 
2796.0 

3493.2 

2840.9 

2356.7 
1914.s 

3588.1 

1?81.3 

3583.5 

2477.8 

1946 

3138.6 

353s.1 

2846.4 

2939.6 

2005.5 

1*35.8 

2268.4 

1947 

2596.6 

3596.6 

2951.0 

2927.8 

2151.3 

1588.0 

2012.4 

1948 

2778.8 

3515.7 

3077.8 

2851.8 

2355.5 

1742.1 

1719.3 

1949 

26l9.8 

3433.0 

3251.4 

2752.8 

2593.9 

IS65.O 

1469.4 

1950 

24i4.9 

3321.5 

3394.4 

2775.3 

2804.9 

1886.2 

1359.3 

1951 

2364.2 

3051.8 

3509.9 

2825.4 

2902.2 

1975.8 

1413.1 

1952 

2332.9 

2815.6 

356€.2 

2929.3 

2890.4 

2119.5 

1563.0 

1953 

2715.6 

2701.O 

34gs.6 

3055.1 

2815.3 

2320.9 

1714.5 

1954 

2312.3 

2544.9 

3406.4 

3227.3 

2717.6 

2555.3 

1835.3 

1955 

2321.0 

2342.6 

3295.6 

3369.4 

2740.1 

2763.4 

1856.1 

1956 

2341.7 

2292.9 

3027.9 

3484.1 

2789.8 

2859.3 

1944.3 

1957 

2574.1 

2262.1 

2793,6 

3541.9 

2892.5 

2847.7 

2085.8 

195s 

2420.4 

2245.4 

2680.2 

3452.4 

3016.5 

2773.6 

2284.1 

1959 

2475.3 

2241.7 

2525.0 

3380.8 

3186.2 

2677.3 

2515.1 

I960 

2535.1 

2249.6 

2324.0 

3270.9 

3326.6 

2699.4 

2719.6 

1961 

2597.5 

2269.2 

2274.7 

3005.3 

3440.0 

274s.4 

2813.8 

1962 

2663.5 

2300.1 

2244.2 

27J2.7 

3497.0 

2849.5 

2802.2 

1963 

2735.7 

2344.8 

2227^*6 

2660.0 

3418.1 

2971.7 

2729.3 

1964 

2811.5 

2397.8 

2223.9 

2506.0 

3337.5 

3138.8 

2634.6 

1.965 

2888.7 

' 2455.7 

2231.7 

2306.9 

3229.0 

3277.3 

2656.3 

1966 

2962.6 

2516.2 

2251.3 

2258.0 

2966.6 

3389.0 

2704.7 

1967 

3035.1 

2580.1 

2282.1 

2227.7 

2737.0 

3445.3 

2804.2 

1968 

3103.1 

2649.8 

2326.6 

2211.2 

2625.7 

3367.5 

2924.3 

1969 

3158.2 

2723.1 

2379*0 

2207.5 

2473.7 

3288.2 

3088.8 

1970 

3200.3 

2797.9 

2436.3 

2215.2 

2277.4 

3181.4 

3224.9 

1971 

3229.3 

2870.0 

2496.3 

2234.7 

2229.1 

2922.9 

3334.8 

1972 

3243.9 

2940.5 

2559.6 

2265.2 

2199.2 

2696.6 

3390.2 

1973 

3241.2 

3006.4 

2628.8 

2309.4 

2182.8 

2586.s 

3313.8 

1974 

3222.2 

3060.1 

2701.7 

2761.2 

2179.2 

2436.9 

3235.7 

1975 

31S9.9 

3101.6 

2775.6 

2418.2 

2186.8 

2243.6 

3130.4 


(in thousands) 


35-39_4-0-44- 45-4-9_50-54_55-59 60-64_65-69_70-74 75-79 80-84 


3300.9 

3035.5 

2924.6 

Ull .7 

2546.4 

2430.9 
2225.2 

1973.8 

1686.3 

1441.3 

1333.6 

1386.8 

1533.9 

1682.5 

1800.7 

1820.9 

1907.6 
2047.0 

2241.6 

2468.2 

2668.5 

2760.6 

2749.1 
2677.6 
2584.9 

2606.4 
2654.0 

2751.5 

2869.3 

3030.5 

3164.1 


2519.6 

3173.1 

3181.2 
3166.4 


3120.1 

3066.7 
2967.9 

2856.7 

2709.2 

2600.2 
•2487.6 

2374.7 

2173.5 

1927.6 

1646.7 
1407.6 
1303.0 


1355.3 

1499.0 

1643.8 

1759.0 

1778.9 

1864.2 

2000.2 


2190.4 

2411.6 
2607.3 
2697.0 

2685.7 
2615.9 
2525.2 

2546.5 


2155.0 

2553.2 

2697.2 
2824.9 
2948.7 


3020.3 

3075.6 

3083.4 
3069.0 

3023.9 

2971.9 

2876.1 
2J68.3 

2625.1 

2519.6 

2410.6 


2301.2 
2106.0 

1867.1 

1594.6 

1363.3 

1262.7 

1314.2 
1453.9 

1594.1 

1705.2 
1724.0 
1807.1 

1939.5 

2124.3 

2333.6 

2527.7 


2035.6 

2070.0 

2105.3 

2157.0 

2231.8 

2322.5 
2443.2 
2581.0 
2703.0 

2821.5 
2889.5 

2942.1 

2949.2 


2935.5 

2892.4 

2842.5 

2750.5 

2647.2 
2510.0 

2409.3 

2305.2 

2200.4 

2013.2 

1733.3 

1523.3 

1302.5 

1207.9 
1258.2 
1392.0 
1525.7 

1630.9 

1648.6 


1842.6 

1696.7 

12*3.6 

848.3 

476.3 

1909.0 

1654.0 

1446.0 

988.0 

570.0 

1908.2 

1667.4 

1438.1 

1024.2 

589.7 

1921.8 

1679.0 

1427.1 

1074.0 

589.1 

1915.8 

1697.2 

1419.7 

1096.5 

613.4 

1925.0 

1715.8 

1411.8 

1111.7 

636.0 

1937.2 

1725.2 

1410.4 

1120.7 

656.0 

1970.1 

1724.4 

1422.2 

1114.0 

680.4 

2019.O 

1736.5 

1432.2 

IIO5.3 

712.0 

2089.1 

1731.2 

1447.9 

1099.9 

726.7 

2174.1 

1739.4 

1463.6 

IO93.8 

736.0 

2287.2 

1750.5 

1471.3 

1093.2 

741.5 

24l6.3 

1780.6 

1470.4 

1102.6 

736.5 

2530.6 

1825.4 

1480.7 

1110.3 

730.6 

264l.l 

1888.9 

1476.2 

1122.8 

727.3 

2704.2 

1966.1 

1483.7 

H34.7 

723.2 

2753.2 

2068.5 

1493.4 

ii4o.6 

723.5 

2759.6 

2185.4 

1519.0 

H39.6 

730.0 

2746.6 

2288.7 

1558.0 

ii47.6 

735.0 

2706.O 

2388.4 

1612.3 

1144.0 

743.5 

2658.8 

2444.4 

1678.7 

1150.2 

751.2 

2572.7 

2488.1 

1766.5 

H57.8 

754.9 

2475.7 

2493.5 

1866.5 

H77.9 

753.7 

2347.1 

2481.6 

1954.7 

1209.2 

759.1 

2253.2 

2444.g 

2039.2 

1251.8 

756.8 

2156.1 

2401.3 

2085.7 

1304.0 

761.1 

2058.3 

2323.3 

2122.3 

1372.4 

766.5 

1882.4 

2235.4 

2126.4 

l450.4 

780.1 

1666.3 

2119.0 

2115.8 

1518.8 

802.0 

1422.2 

2034.6 

2084.5 

1583.5 

830.7 

1216.3 

19^7.0 

2046.3 

1617.9 

866.0 

1130.3 

1858.9 

1979.3 

1645.3 

911.6 


196.2 

246.0 

253.5 

266.1 
274.7 

282.2 

294.2 

304.2 
303.1 

315.9 

327.3 

333.9 


374.3 
373.5 

380.9 

377.9 

374.7 

373.4 

371.4 

371.7 

375.3 

377.9 

382.8 

336.3 

388.0 

336.9 

339.7 

338.7 

391.3 
394.2 


85-89 

90-94 

55.2 

8.3 

7p.7 

12.1 

74.9 

12.4 

77.1 

13.0 

79.7 

13.9 

83.6 

l4.8 

g 7 .o 

15.6 

S9.6 

16.4 

94.1 

16.9 

97.0 

17.4 

99.6 

Ig.3 

103.8 

19.3 

107.4 

19.s 

106.6 

20.8 

111.5 

21.3 

115.8 

21.9 

119.9 

22.8 

124.6 

23.4- 

129.4 

23.2 

132.1 

24.5 

133.3 

25.5 

133.8 

26.4 

132.5 

27.4 

131.5 

28.4 

131.0 

28.9 

130.4 

29.2 

130.8 

29.3 

132.2 

29.0 

133.0 

28.7 

134.8 

28.6 

135.? 

28.6 

136.4 

28.7 


35=21 


Total 


1.0 

1.2 

1.3 

1.4 

1.4 

1.5 
1.5 

1.5 

1.6 

1.7 

1.8 
2.0 
2.1 
2.3 

1:2 

2.5 

2.5 

2.5 

2.6 
2.8 
2.9 
2.9 

3.2 

3.3 
3-5 
3.6 
3-f 
3.6 
3.6 
3.6 


33673.6 

35938.3 

36050.4 
36094.0 

36115.6 

36123.5 

36121.9 

36IH.5 

36094.5 

36069.6 

36044.2 

36022.2 

36005.2 

35993.9 

35939.5 

35993.2 

36006.0 

36027.2 
36058.0 

36103.2 

36161.9 

36230.8 
36306.0 

36390.8 

36485.6 

36580.1 

36673.4 

36759.3 

36840.8 

36915.6 

36975.1 

37021.5 


FEMALES 


(in thousands) 


Year 0-4 


5-9 _ 10-14 _ 15-19 _ 20-24 _ 25-29 _ 30-34 _ 35-39 _ 40-44 45-49 _ 50-54 _ 55-59 _ 6 0-64 _ 65-69 _ 70-74 75-79 80-84 85-89 90-94 


95-99 _ Total 



3242.6 

3259.1 

2988.3 

mx 

2495.3 

2299.5 

2251.1 

2221.1 

2204.7 

2201.5 
2209.6 

2229.2 
2260.0 

2304.1 

2356.1 

2413.2 

2472.9 

2676.1 

2749.5 
2820.0 

2888.9 

2953.3 

3006.4 

3046.6 

3074.4 

3058.5 

3085.7 

3067.7 

3037.0 


2699.5 

3284.1 

m 

3367.6 
328 } A 

3176.7 
2918.3 

2692.2 

2581.8 
24^5.2 

2241.6 

mu 

2148.7 
2145.2 


2152.5 
2171.2 
2200.9 
2245.7 

2294.2 

2349.5 

2407.6 
2468.5 

2535.3 

2605.1 

2676.7 

2745.7 

2813.2 

2876.4 


2927.9 

2967.5 


3074.4 
2699.0 
2742.0 

2842.5 

2961.3 
3128.0 

3261.6 
3370.9 

3422.8 

3344.8 

3261.5 

3155.3 
2898.7 

2674.1 

2564.5 
24l9.0 

2226.5 

2179.3 

2150.2 

2134.6 
2131.2 

2138.4 

2156.6 

2185.9 
2228.3 

2278.5 

2333.5 
2391.2 

2451.6 

2517.9 
2587.? 
2658.4 


3284.5 
2993.0 

2927.5 

2844.3 
2767.O 

2664.4 

2682.5 

2725.1 
2825.0 

2943.2 

3108.6 

3241.6 

3350.2 

3401.6 

3323.8 

3240.8 

3135.6 

2880.5 
2657.4 

2548.3 

2403.8 

2212.7 

2165.6 

2136.7 

2121.4 

2118.3 

2125.4 

2143.4 
21-72.5 

2214.4 
2264.1 

2318.8 


2290.9 

3335.0 

3254.2 

3152.3 

3065.3 


3021.7 

2962.1 

2897.8 

2814.8 

2738.1 

2636.8 

2654.8 

2697.3 

2796.3 

2913.2 
3076.6 

3208.3 

3315.9 
33^6.7 

3289.3 

3207.2 
3103.1 
2850.6 
2629.6 

2521.5 

2375.3 

2189.6 

2143.3 
21l4.8 
2099.6 
2096.6 


2103.5 


3531.3 
2125.0 
2318.6 

2630.7 

2941.2 

3206.7 

3291.4 
3211.g 

3111.2 

3025.3 
2982.2 

2923.3 

2859.8 
2778.1 

2702.3 
2602.3 
2620. 2 
2662.1 


2759.9 

2875.1 

3036.3 

3166.6 

3272.8 

3322.9 

3246.3 

3165.2 

3062.4 

2813.2 
2595.3 
24gg.4 


2347.2 

2160.9 


mu 

3215.0 

2918.9 

2555.4 

2226.9 

2093.8 

2284.8 

2592.4 

2898.0 

3159.5 
3242.7 
3164.3 

3065.1 

2980.5 

2938.2 

2880.3 

2817.6 



2563.7 

2581.4 

2622.8 

2719.1 

2832.8 

2991.5 

1112:5 

3273.7 

3198.2 
3118.3 
3017.2 


3344.7 
3512.0 
3527.0 

3480.8 

3466.1 

3420.1 

3358.1 

3160.4 

2869.1 
2511.6 
2188.6 
2038.? 

2246.4 

2548.9 

2849.2 

3105.8 

3187.5 

3110.4 
3013.0 
2930.0 

2888.4 

2831.4 

2769.8 

2690.6 

2617.1 

2519.9 

2537.5 

2578.4 

2673.2 

2784.9 

2940.9 
3067.1 


3059.1 
3312.0 

3334.2 

3364.6 
3377.5 
34ig.2 

3440.4 
3455.0 

3409.7 

3395.4 

3350.4 

3289.5 

3095.5 
2810.0 

2459.8 
2!43.5 

2016.4 

2201.4 
2498.0 
2792.0 

3042.7 

3122.4 

3047.1 

2951.6 

2870.3 

2829.6 

2773.7 

2713.2 
2635.6 
2 
2 



2485.8 


2693.3 
3027.0 
3072.9 

3112.4 
3168.2 
3192.0 
3226.8 

3248.4 


3277.9 

3290.3 

3330.0 

3351.7 

3365.9 
3321.6 

3307.8 
3264.0 

3204.7 

3015.3 
2736.5 

2395.2 

2087.3 

1964.8 
2146.1 


2435.3 

2721.5 

2964.7 

3041.6 

2968 .? 

2875.4 
2796.1 

2756.5 
2702.0 


2406.6 

2635.0 

2696.0 

2756.5 

2817.1 

2868.6 
2916.8 

2960.7 

2998.8 

3052.6 

3075.4 

3108.8 

3129.7 
3158.3 

3170.2 

3208.6 

3229.6 

3243.1 

3200.2 

3186.7 

3144.6 

3087.5 

2904.5 

2634.8 

2305.6 
2009.2 
1893.1 

2069.6 

2348.7 

2623.8 

2856.6 

2929.6 


2095.2 

2317.0 

2341.4 

2384.6 

2409.4 

2453.7 

2497.0 

2554.7 
2612.0 
2669.2 
2718.0 
2763.6 


2805.1 

2841.3 

2892.6 

2914.1 

2945.9 

2965.4 

2992.5 

3003.9 

3040.1 

3060.1 

3072.5 

3031.5 

3018.8 

2978.9 
2924.8 
2750.4 

2493.3 

2180.6 
1900.6 

1793.4 


1885.7 
1934.0 
1966.6 

2003.4 

2041.5 

2084.6 



2185.0 
2207.8 

2248.7 

2288.7 
2341.3 

2394.2 

2446.3 
2491.0 
2532.6 

2570.4 

2603.9 
2651.0 

2670.5 

2699.3 

2716.9 
2742.0 

2752.8 
2786.0 
2804.2 

2814.9 

2776.4 
2765.O 

2728.6 

2678.9 


!395.8 
1666.0 
1672.O 
1668.2 
1677-3 
1680.4 


1691.5 

1720.1 
1752.0 

1785.8 

1823.3 

1857.1 
1876.0 

1910.6 

1930.8 
1967.0 

2002.4 


2048.2 

2094.6 

2139.8 

2178.9 

2215.2 

2247.9 
2277.5 

2318.7 

2335.4 

2360.5 


2375.3 

2397.5 

2407.2 

2436.2 

2452.2 


993.2 

1137.0 

1181.7 

1249.6 
1281.2 

1310.7 

1333.2 
1337.4 

1334.2 

13 fl- 7 

1344.3 

1353.8 

llll :£ 

1429.9 

1459.6 
l4g6.5 

1501.3 

1529.1 

1545.3 

1574.9 

1603.3 

1639.6 

1677.3 
1712.8 

1744.1 


1773.1 

1798.7 

1822.7 
1855.8 
1868.6 
1888.6 


599.9 

687.0 

707.1 

701.4 

731.2 
758.0 

783.9 

815.3 

860.3 
881.6 

901.3 
916.2 

918.5 

915.9 

921.4 
923.3 

PI:i 

964.1 

983.5 

1003.5 
1021.9 

1031.5 

1050.8 
1062.2 
IO83.O 
1103.0 

1127.6 
1154.1 

1177.8 
1199.5 
1219.0 


273.5 
326.0 
334.0 

348.9 

356.2 

363.2 

374.9 

385.6 

381.7 
? 98.8 
413-7 
428.6 

446.2 

469.9 

481.4 

491.5 
499.1 

499.6 

497.9 
501.0 

502.4 

506.9 
516.0 

525.4 

m 

556.9 

561.7 

572.4 

578.7 

590.5 

601.8 


88.7 

106.2 


111.2 

113.2 

116.6 

121.3 

125.5 

128.4 


134.1 
136.6 

m 

148.1 
146.0 
152.9 

158.8 

165.1 

172.2 

180.7 

184.9 

188.5 
191.2 
191.0 
190.2 

191.7 
x 92. 3 

194.4 

197.8 

201.5 

205.9 
210.0 
213.8 


15.4 

20.9 
21.0 

21.9 

22.9 
24.2 

25.6 

26.7 
2.7.0 

27.9 

29.1 

30.1 

30.8 

32.2 

32.7 

IU 

35.5 

34.9 

36.7 

38.2 

ll\i 

43.14- 

44.3 

45.0 

45.6 
45.5 

S:5 

SI:! 


2.1 

2.2 

i:l 

2.5 

2.6 
2.8 

2.8 

2.9 

3.o 

3.2 

3.4 

3.5 

3.5 

3.6 

3.8 
4.o 

4.o 

4.2 

u 

4.6 
5-7 

4.5 

4.8 
5.0 

5.2 

5.5 

5.7 

5.8 

5.9 
6.0 


40528.3 

41793.5 

41807.2 

41800.3 

41769.6 
41724.0 

41667.4 

41600.7 

41524.2 

41438.2 

41350.6 

41262.9 

41177.4 

41094.6 

41015.7 

40942.5 

40875.4 

40812.9 

40757.2 

40711.8 

40676.9 

40649.6 
40625.0 

40606.5 

40596.2 

40583.3 

40567.5 

40542.5 

40511.3 

40471.5 

40417.4 

40347.8 


CONFIDENTIAL 







































































. 














































































































































































































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